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Bring the outside world in – the best eye-opening documentar­ies to broaden your lockdown horizon

▶ Samia Badih rounds up the films based on true stories worth adding to your must-watch list

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As we spend more time at home, a big chunk of it is being consumed firstly by social media, and secondly by watching films and television shows. As a result, over the past few months, many filmmakers, including those from the Arab world, have been making their works available online so more people can see them. We round up the must-watch documentar­ies from, and about, the Arab world, now available for viewing over the internet.

For Sama

For Sama is an award-winning documentar­y feature that was shot over five years during the uprising in Aleppo, Syria. It tells the story of Waad Al-Kateab as she falls in love, gets married and gives birth to her daughter, Sama, all during a catastroph­ic conflict. Directed by Al-Khateab and Edward Watts, the film is a love letter to Sama. It won numerous awards, including a Bafta for Best Documentar­y. It was also nominated for an Oscar this year, for Best Documentar­y Feature, but lost to American

Factory. The film is available for streaming online via the Internatio­nal Documentar­y Film Festival Amsterdam (IDFA) website.

A World Not Ours

A World Not Ours is a brilliant documentar­y that takes its title from Palestinia­n author Ghassan Kanafani’s novel. Directed by Mahdi Fleifel, the film, based on Fleifel’s own family story, looks at three generation­s living in exile in a refugee camp in southern Lebanon. It is pieced together using a wealth of archival footage, telling a sensitive story on the themes of belonging and friendship. The documentar­y feature film has won several awards, including the Black Pearl Award at the Abu Dhabi Film Festival in 2012. It’s available to buy or rent on Vimeo or watch via the IDFA’s website.

Return to Homs

This is a documentar­y by Oscar-nominated Syrian director Talal Derki (Of Fathers and

Sons). The film follows the tragic story of Abdul Baset Al-Sarout, 19, goalkeeper for the Syrian national soccer team, and his friend and journalist Ossama, 24. When the Syrian conflict breaks out, the young athlete becomes a renowned protest leader and singer who is filmed regularly by his friend Ossama. But when the army cracks down on Homs, the two protestors take up arms and become insurgents. Return to Homs was screened at festivals around the world and won the World Cinema Grand Jury Prize for Best Documentar­y at the Sundance festival in 2014. It is available to buy or rent on Vimeo and is also on the IDFA website.

5 Broken Cameras

Co-directed by Emad Burnat and Guy Davidi, 5 Broken Cameras documents the resistance of the residents of Palestinia­n town Bilin, west of Ramallah in the West Bank, against settlement­s. The story is told through the lenses of five cameras owned by Burnat, a farmer, who bought his first camera in 2005 to document the birth of his son. The film has won a number of awards, including Best Documentar­y at the Internatio­nal Emmy Awards in 2013, and was nominated for an Oscar for Best Documentar­y Feature that same year. It’s available to rent or buy on Vimeo.

Gaza Surf Club

This documentar­y received its world premiered at the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival in 2016. Directed by Philip Gnadt and Mickey Yamine,

Gaza Surf Club tells the story of a group of young boys in the Palestinia­n city who surf as a way to escape their realities. It’s a heartwarmi­ng story about finding a little bit of freedom in a place that has been described as “an open-air prison”. The film is available for streaming on video-on-demand site Cinemoz.

Cairo Drive

Directed by Sherief Elkatsha,

Cairo Drive takes viewers on a ride around the streets of the Egyptian capital, showing the diversity of the city’s population. With a bit of comedy, the film captures voices of people in the days leading up to the Egyptian revolution. The film had its world premiere at the Abu Dhabi Film Festival in 2013 and won the Best Documentar­y From the Arab World award. The film is available to buy or rent on Vimeo.

Teta, Alf Marra (Grandma, a Thousand Times)

This charming film comes from Mahmoud Kaabour, the award-winning director of 2004 documeanta­ry Being

Osama, which follows six individual­s united by their their first name. Teta, Alf Marra, meanwhile, celebrates Kaabour’s grandmothe­r, Teta Fatima, 83. Kaabour documents her life, as she talks of her love story with her late violinist husband, who had died 20 years prior. The film is a beautiful exploratio­n of the themes of love, family, growing old and death. It is available to buy or rent on Vimeo.

‘For Sama’ is Waad AlKateab’s love letter to her daughter, born against the backdrop of catastroph­ic conflict in Syria

 ?? Nakba Filmworks ?? A scene from ‘A World Not Ours’ (2012), directed by Mahdi Fleifel. The film follows three generation­s of a family living in a refugee camp in Lebanon
Nakba Filmworks A scene from ‘A World Not Ours’ (2012), directed by Mahdi Fleifel. The film follows three generation­s of a family living in a refugee camp in Lebanon
 ?? Waad Al-Kateab ?? A scene from Waad Al-Kateab and Edward Watts’s ‘For Sama’ (2019)
Waad Al-Kateab A scene from Waad Al-Kateab and Edward Watts’s ‘For Sama’ (2019)

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