Review: Saudi film ‘Champions’ is a heartfelt movie about friendship, football, and learning difficulties

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The movie starring Yassir Al Saggaf a Saudi Tv presenter and actor who is playing the role of Khalid in the movie alongside the Saudi Actress Fatima Al Banawi, who plays the role of Khaled’s fiancee. (Supplied)
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Updated 06 March 2022
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Review: Saudi film ‘Champions’ is a heartfelt movie about friendship, football, and learning difficulties

  • “The movie was filmed in Jeddah and we faced challenges because of the pandemic,” Al-Saggaf told Arab News

RIYADH: The Saudi football film “Champions” delivers a beautiful message on humanity and people's behavior.

It follows the journey of Khaled, a temperamental and arrogant assistant coach of a successful professional Saudi football team.

His rage leads him to disciplinary court after a particularly frustrating match. He loses his high-profile career, suffers a major blow to his ego, and his community service turns out to be coaching an amateur team of players who have learning difficulties.




Saudi film ‘Champions’ is scheduled to release on March 10. (Supplied)

But he realizes how much he needs to learn from his new team when they respond to his poor attitude with good humor, friendliness, and innocence.

The movie stars Saudi TV presenter and actor Yassir Al-Saggaf, who plays Khaled, and Saudi actress Fatima Al-Banawi, who plays the role of Khaled’s fiancee.

HIGHLIGHTS

• The movie stars Saudi TV presenter and actor Yassir Al-Saggaf, who plays Khaled, and Saudi actress Fatima Al-Banawi, who plays the role of Khaled’s fiancee.

• It was directed by Manuel Calvo and produced by the Oscar-winning Andres Vicente Gomez.

“The movie was filmed in Jeddah and we faced challenges because of the pandemic,” Al-Saggaf told Arab News. “We had two phases for filming it: One before the pandemic and one after. Everyone who saw the film wanted to jump in to help show the movie. I would like to thank the Film Commission and Ministry of Culture for showing the film at Dubai Expo 2020.”




The Saudi movie Champions took the interest of many parties due to its beautiful message to create a connection between people with disabilities and the community. (Supplied)

Al-Saggaf said all the actors with disabilities in the movie were acting for the first time, adding that they did a “great job.” He hoped they would continue working in the entertainment industry.

The family-friendly movie is light and funny. There are plenty of laughs because of how the characters see life and the way they want to have fun and enjoy the moment.

It was directed by Manuel Calvo and produced by the Oscar-winning Andres Vicente Gomez.

Gomez said he did not want to use professional actors to portray people with special needs as it would contradict the film's purpose.

“Through their sense of humor, kindness, and respect, the boys are great actors, and the film and its main characters set an example for the rest of society,” he said.

The movie, which is scheduled for release on March 10, is a remake of the Spanish film “Campeones,” one of Spanish cinema's biggest breakthroughs in the last decade.

“Champions” has attracted a lot of attention because of its uplifting message, as well as its attempt to change people’s perception of those with special needs.

 


‘Eltiqa’ returns to Riyadh with Saudi and Brazilian arts

Updated 2 min 19 sec ago
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‘Eltiqa’ returns to Riyadh with Saudi and Brazilian arts

  • CONEXAO exhibition aims to foster cultural exchange between the Kingdom and Brazil

RIYADH: The Confluence of Saudi-Brazilian Culture, or CONEXAO, will be held in Riyadh from Jan. 30 to Feb. 1, under the patronage of the Saudi minister of culture and chair of the board of trustees of the Royal Institute of Traditional Arts, Prince Badr bin Abdullah bin Farhan.

The exhibition, to be held at the King Fahad Cultural Center in Riyadh under the theme “Eltiqa: the Saudi-Brazilian traditional arts,” will offer a unique cultural and artistic experience, highlighting the artistic harmony between the two nations.

Following the success of the inaugural “Eltiqa” event with South Korea in 2023, this second edition reaffirms the Royal Institute of Traditional Arts’ commitment to fostering international cultural dialogue.

The CONEXAO program will feature five traditional Saudi performances and five Brazilian performances, culminating in a blended dance that integrates traditional artistic elements from both nations.

Additionally, a collaborative artwork created by two female artists from Saudi Arabia and Brazil will be showcased.

The event will include over 15 cultural activities, such as workshops and educational sessions on performing and visual arts, aimed at enhancing cultural understanding and strengthening connections between the two cultures.

CONEXAO is part of the institute’s initiatives to promote artistic movement and international cultural exchange in the Kingdom.

It aligns with the objectives of Saudi Vision 2030 by creating new cultural platforms to raise awareness of traditional arts and supporting efforts to preserve and share them locally and globally.

 


Oscar nomination for Palestinian documentary ‘No Other Land’

Updated 24 January 2025
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Oscar nomination for Palestinian documentary ‘No Other Land’

DUBAI: The Palestinian documentary “No Other Land” has been nominated for the Best Documentary at this year’s Oscars.

The film was directed by a collective of four Israeli and Palestinian filmmakers — activists Basel Adra, Hamdan Ballal, Yuval Abraham and Rachel Szor — and marks their directorial debut.

“No Other Land” follows the story of Adra, a young Palestinian activist from Masafer Yatta in the West Bank, as he fights against the mass expulsion of his community by Israeli forces. Since childhood, Adra has documented the demolition of homes and displacement of residents in his region under military occupation.

The film also explores his unlikely partnership with Abraham, an Israeli journalist who supports his efforts. However, their alliance is tested by the stark inequality between them — Adra lives under constant occupation, while Abraham enjoys freedom and security.

The film has dominated the pre-Oscar awards circuit, winning major accolades such as the top honor at the Cinema Eye Honors, Best Documentary and Best Director at the IDA Awards, Best European Documentary at the European Film Awards, and Best Documentary at the Berlin Film Festival, where it premiered last February.

This year’s Academy Awards ceremony will take place on March 3.


Ramy Youssef’s animated series to have world premiere in Texas

Updated 24 January 2025
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Ramy Youssef’s animated series to have world premiere in Texas

  • ‘#1 Happy Family USA’ explores experiences of Muslim-American family in early 2000s

DUBAI: Egyptian American actor Ramy Youssef’s animated series “#1 Happy Family USA” will make its world premiere at the South by Southwest Film Festival in Austin, Texas, which runs from March 7 to 15.

The show explores the experiences of a Muslim-American family in the early 2000s.

Youssef voices Rumi Hussein, a 12-year-old boy with big dreams and a desire to fit in. Rumi, named after the 13th century poet, also has a hard time living up to the name.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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Youssef also voices Rumi’s father, a former cardiothoracic surgeon who now runs a halal cart.

The series stars actress Alia Shawkat, who is of Iraqi, American, Irish, Italian and Norwegian descent, Egyptian-Canadian comedian Salma Hindy, US singer-actress Mandy Moore, “Ramy” actress Randa Jarrar, and US comedians Chris Redd, Akaash Singh and Whitmer Thomas.

Youssef is the co-creator of the series with US writer and TV producer Pam Brady. The pair are the executive producers of the show with Iraqi-British journalist Mona Chalabi. A24 and Amazon Studios co-produced.


REVIEW: Netflix’s French thriller ‘Ad Vitam’ fails to pick a lane

Updated 24 January 2025
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REVIEW: Netflix’s French thriller ‘Ad Vitam’ fails to pick a lane

JEDDAH: It’s hard to know quite what to make of “Ad Vitam.” Maybe because its creators don’t seem to have decided quite what they were making.

Co-writer Guillaume Canet stars as Franck Lazarev, whose wife Leo is just days away from giving birth to their first child. Franck is working a civilian job checking historical buildings for structural cracks (which makes for some stunning opening shots of Paris). A few days after finding their apartment has been ransacked, they are attacked by masked intruders, who kidnap Leo and tell Franck that unless he hands over “the key,” she will die and he will be framed for her murder. It all makes for a gripping 30 minutes.

Then the story goes back a full decade. Leo and Franck are trainees for the GIGN (essentially the French police’s anti-terrorist unit). They become ace agents, bond with certain colleagues, fall in love… you get the picture. It’s a montage — but one that takes around 20 minutes when it could have taken two. It throws off the momentum considerably.

Next, we jump ahead nine years to find Franck leading a team of agents who are called to a hotel where gunshots have been heard. Things escalate rapidly. Two perpetrators are killed, but so is Franck’s best friend, and his protégé is seriously wounded. Franck is fired.

But he can’t let it go. He gets his friend’s badge tested for DNA (explaining a notable focus on badges in the earlier flashback sequence) and discovers that one of the two perps was actually a government agent. A conspiracy begins to unravel. The key demanded by the kidnappers opens the locker where Franck has stashed the evidence.

Back to the present: Franck rushes to save Leo, and we’re back to frantic action, this time with mediocre parkour scenes and a paragliding sequence that is hilarious (unintentionally). Canet clearly fancies himself an all-action hero in the Tom Cruise mold. He doesn’t pull it off. Like the film itself, Canet is best when playing it small and gritty.

Credit to the makers for taking some big swings, but they don’t come off. And while “Ad Vitam” is entertaining enough, it’s also instantly forgettable.


Review: Netflix’s documentary ‘Cold Case: Who Killed JonBenet Ramsey’ 

Updated 23 January 2025
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Review: Netflix’s documentary ‘Cold Case: Who Killed JonBenet Ramsey’ 

It is the unsolved murder that still grips the public imagination almost three decades later. Netflix’s 2024 “Cold Case: Who Killed JonBenet Ramsey” reexamines the 1996 killing of the 6-year-old beauty queen.

Directed by Joe Berlinger, the three-part series dives deeper into the investigative missteps, the chaotic media frenzy surrounding the case and the lingering questions that continue to haunt a picturesque mountain town in the US. 

The story unfolds the morning after Christmas in Boulder, Colorado, when the pretty 6-year-old goes missing from her slept-in bed.

JonBenet’s disappearance was initially believed to be a kidnapping as the family found a bizarrely worded, lengthy handwritten ransom note in their home. It demanded an odd amount of money — $118,000, which exactly matched the amount of John Ramsey’s Christmas bonus. 

Expert examination revealed the handwriting matched nobody’s in the Ramsey household, but it had been ripped out of a notepad found in the house.

Police officers entered the Ramsey home and looked around, but did not find the missing child. Her body was later discovered there; she had been strangled and bludgeoned.

From the outset, the documentary paints a damning picture of the Boulder Police Department’s mishandling of the investigation, from failing to secure the crime scene early on to focusing on the Ramsey family — to not focusing enough on the family.

All while overlooking other potential leads. 

Critics argue that it glosses over key elements, leaving viewers with an incomplete picture of the case. 

For those unfamiliar with the case, the series offers a look at it from semi-fresh eyes. An unsolved murder never expires. 

Now, 28 years later, the passage of time only heightens the frustration.

This cold case serves as a stark reminder of how flawed investigations can destroy lives and how this little girl has been frozen in time forever.

And so far her killer — or killers — got away with their crime.