DOHA: Women filmmakers are increasingly playing an active role in the Arab world’s film industry bridging the gender divide that had been cited as a challenge faced by regional cinema. Evidence to the dramatic strides made by Arab women filmmakers is highlighted at the fourth Doha Tribeca Film Festival, the annual cultural celebration of Doha Film Institute (DFI), which opens with accomplished filmmaker Mira Nair’s (pictured) The Reluctant Fundamentalist.
DTFF will be held between November 17 and 24 with indoor and outdoor screenings taking place at Katara Cultural Village, Museum of Islamic Arts (MIA), and Souq Waqif. Eight Qatari films are helmed by women directors, eleven films by Arab women filmmakers are screened in the Festival’s Arab Film Competition, while the Contemporary World Cinema, Special Screenings, and Tribute to Algerian Cinema feature another six films directed by women, in addition to the opening gala. The films are distinct in their thematic and narrative approach, highlighting the imprint made by women filmmakers globally.
In the Arab Film Competition segment are Maggie Morgan’s Asham: A Man Called Hope, which narrates the stories of six couples at different stages in their relationship, set against the lead up to the 25 January Revolution; and Hanan Abdalla’s In the Shadow of a Man, that presents the personal revolutions of four women from different backgrounds in post-revolution Egypt.
Also in competition are Tamara Stepanyan’s Embers, a touching tribute to the memory of the filmmaker’s grandmother; A Deep Long Breath by Tahani Rached which documents the 18 days that brought about the end of dictatorship in Egypt; Rafea: Solar Mama by Jehane Noujaim and Mona Eldaief, which follows the story of a Jordanian Bedouin mother, who leaves her home to travel to India to obtain an education; The Lebanese Rocket Society co-directed by Joana Hadjithomas – a reflection of the reawakening of hopes in the wake of the Arab spring; Sanctity by Ahd Kamel, which documents the story of Areej, a pregnant, young Saudi widow, who will endure anything to protect her unborn child; L`Mrayet by Nadia Rais is about a man who is hired to write the future; Ismail by Nora Alsharif is about a young Palestinian boy living in a refugee camp who struggles to escape imminent death when he and his little brother stray into a minefield; When They Slept by Maryam Touzani is about the relationship between a grandfather and a granddaughter and The Wall by Odette Makhlouf Mouarkech is about living everyday life in Beirut during the civil war.
‘Made in Qatar,’ includes Amna Al Khalaf’s Brains of Empowerment, an experimental film about the empowerment of women in the Middle East; and Lyrics Revolt by Shannon Farhoud, Ashlene Ramadan, Melanie Fridgant and Rana Khaled Al Khatib, a documentary that started as a student project at Northwestern University in Qatar, exploring the events of Arab Spring through hip hop artists of the Middle East in addition to Ghazil - The Story of Rached & Jawaher by Sarah Al-Derham, Rain by Rehab El Ewaly, The Worker by Manal Ahmed , His Name by Hend Fakhroo, Bader by Sarah Al-Saadi, Maaria Assami, Latifa Al-Darwish and Crazy Calm by Noor Ahmed Yaqiub.
As part of the Contemporary World Cinema line-up, DTFF will screen Children of Sarajevo by Marija Pikic and Ismir Gagula, the story of two siblings living in the harsh battle-scarred Sarajevo, Dominga Sotomayor’s Thursday Till Sunday, narrates the story of 10-year-old Lucia, her parents, and brother and their holiday in the north of Chile, which results in broken familial bonds, ending in an emotional farewell and a family in crisis and Venus and Serena by Maiken Baird and Michelle Major, document the story of the greatest tennis champions in the world. The Peninsula