Palestinian voices take center stage at Sundance

Joe Plummer, Rachel Leah Jones, Libby Lenkinski, Noam Shuster Eliassi, Amber Fares, Rabab Haj Yahya, Ina Fichman, ValÈrie Montmartin, Noa Yachot, Alison Klayman and Gavin Fernandez attend the "Coexistence, My Ass!" Premiere during the 2025 Sundance Film Festival at Egyptian Theatre on January 26, 2025 in Park City, Utah. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 27 January 2025
Follow

Palestinian voices take center stage at Sundance

  • Earlier this week, “No Other Land,” a film by a Palestinian-Israeli activist collective about Palestinians displaced by Israeli troops and settlers in the West Bank, earned an Oscar nomination for best documentary feature
  • The film — one of two Palestinian movies premiering at this year’s Sundance festival — follows three generations of a family who were expelled from coastal Jaffa in 1948, and sent to the West Bank

PARK CITY, United States: Palestinian-American director Cherien Dabis was in the West Bank, days away from shooting her ambitious and deeply personal drama “All That’s Left Of You,” when the events of October 7, 2023 forced a radical rethink.
“We were forced to evacuate... It was really devastating to have to leave our Palestinian crew behind,” recalled Dabis.
“Everyone was so excited to work on this historic Palestinian film that felt like a milestone.”
The film — one of two Palestinian movies premiering at this year’s Sundance festival — follows three generations of a family who were expelled from coastal Jaffa in 1948, and sent to the West Bank.




(L-R) Cherien Dabis and Maria Zreik attend the "All That's Left of You (???? ???? ???)" Premiere during the 2025 Sundance Film Festival at Eccles Center Theatre on January 25, 2025 in Park City, Utah. (AFP)

Costing between $5-8 million, it is a rare example of a major Palestinian-centered feature film getting a high-profile premiere in the West.
“It’s really, really hard to make any film, but it’s particularly hard to make a Palestinian film,” said Dabis.
“It’s hard to raise money for these films... I think people have perhaps been afraid to tell the story.”
Both intimate and epic in scope, the film jumps chronologically, from 1948 through the decades to the near-present day.




(L-R) Kali Reis, Meghann Fahy, Lily LaTorre, Max Walker-Silverman and Josh O'Connor attend the "Rebuilding" Premiere during the 2025 Sundance Film Festival at Eccles Center Theatre on January 26, 2025 in Park City, Utah. (AFP)

Dabis herself stars as a mother forced to confront an impossible decision when her son is wounded in 1988 during the first intifada, or uprising.
Many of the stories are based on the real experiences of Dabis and her family.
In one harrowing scene, a father is humiliated at gunpoint by Israeli soldiers in front of his young child, creating a father-son rift that will never heal.
“I saw my dad humiliated at borders and checkpoints,” said Dabis, who visited the West Bank frequently as a child.
“He confronted the soldiers, and they started screaming at him, and I was convinced they were going to kill him.”

Though the film centers on a single family and is deeply personal in nature, the divisive nature of its subject matter means “All That’s Left Of You” is certain to provoke criticism.
Dabis says that the film does not set out to be political, but accepts that the impression is unavoidable.
“We can’t tell our stories without having to answer to some political questions,” she told AFP.
“We should be able to share our life experiences and tell our personal and family stories and share our points of view without having to contend with blowback.
“So often we do end up fearing it, even before we have told the story.”
That political reality reared again in October 2023, when the Hamas attack on Israel resulted in the deaths of 1,210 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.
Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed at least 47,306 people in Gaza, the majority civilians, according to figures from the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry that the United Nations considers reliable.
Dabis and her team fled, and completed the film by using locations in Jordan, Cyprus and Greece standing in for her ancestral homeland.
“I’m actually still shocked that we finished the film,” Dabis told the premiere audience.
It does not yet have a theatrical distributor.

Also premiering at Sundance on Sunday is documentary “Coexistence My Ass!“
It follows Jewish peace activist-turned-comedian Noam Shuster-Eliassi, as she constructs a one-woman show and grapples with the consequences of Israel’s military campaign.
“As an activist, I reached 20 people, and in a viral video mocking dictators, I reached 20 million people,” she told AFP, admitting she is “anxious” about how the film will be received.
Earlier this week, “No Other Land,” a film by a Palestinian-Israeli activist collective about Palestinians displaced by Israeli troops and settlers in the West Bank, earned an Oscar nomination for best documentary feature.
It still does not have a US distributor.
“The industry has to ask itself... there obviously is a need for these films, people want to see these films,” said “Coexistence My Ass!” director Amber Fares.
“I do think that perhaps in the last few years, we have seen a shift,” added Dabis.
“People are understanding that there’s a dearth of our stories.. and that our stories are really missing from the mainstream narrative.”
 

 


Alia Shawkat promotes projects at Sundance Film Festival

Updated 27 January 2025
Follow

Alia Shawkat promotes projects at Sundance Film Festival

DUBAI: US Iraqi actress Alia Shawkat is at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival in Utah, the US, to promote her latest projects.

Shawkat attended the premiere of “Atropia” on Saturday, before hitting the stage with actor Jon Hamm to discuss their Audible original series “The Big Fix: A Jack Bergin Mystery” on Sunday.

“Atropia” is a 2025 American war satire film written and directed by Hailey Gates. The film follows an aspiring actress, played by Shawkat, who works on a US military base that simulates an Iraqi war zone.

Alia Shawkat at the Deadline 2025 Sundance Film Festival Portrait Studio held at the Deadline Studio on January 25, 2025 in Park City, Utah. (Getty Images)

It is a real concept that the US military employs, with the director telling IndieWire that she “tried to make a documentary about it first.”

“So I did a lot of research and visited a bunch of the bases. Sort of working my way up the (Department of Defence), and they weren’t interested in my documentary. So then I thought it was a subject ripe for satire. I think America’s misunderstanding of the people they’re invading is inherently comedic,” Gates added.

Shawkat also stars in audio thriller “The Big Fix: A Jack Bergin Mystery,” in which Hamm plays Jack Bergin, an FBI agent turned private investigator.

The eight-part series, created by John Mankiewicz and directed by Aaron Lipstadt, is a sequel to Audible’s cinematic audio drama “The Big Lie.” The new season debuts on Audible on April 24 and tells “a riveting tale of corruption and displacement in 1950s Los Angeles,” according to Audible.

Hamm is joined by returning cast members Ana de la Reguera and John Slattery, alongside newcomers Shawkat, Omar Epps, Erin Moriarty, Jeanne Tripplehorn, Sosie Bacon, David Giuntoli and Taylor Zakhar Perez.

The series is set in 1957, when Bergin finds himself entangled in a web of power, corruption and murder that reaches local government.

In a released statement, Shawkat commented: “I’m proud to be a part of such an outstanding project, and I’m eager for listeners to immerse themselves in this captivating story we’ve crafted together. I really enjoyed playing in this era with a fast-paced, well-written mystery.”


Oscar-winning composer Hans Zimmer wows fans in Riyadh  

Updated 25 January 2025
Follow

Oscar-winning composer Hans Zimmer wows fans in Riyadh  

RIYADH: Renowned composer Hans Zimmer performed on Friday at the Mohammed Abdo Arena in Saudi Arabia as part of the Riyadh Season events. 

The Oscar-winning composer performed a selection of compositions from films such as “Dune,” “Wonder Woman,” “Pirates of the Caribbean,” “Interstellar,” “The Lion King” and “No Time to Die.” 

The concert concluded with enthusiastic applause, marking a memorable highlight of the Riyadh Season. (Supplied)

The music was accompanied by interactive visual projections and stage effects that complemented the performance and highlighted its theme. 

The concert, which sold out immediately on ticket release, concluded with enthusiastic applause, marking a memorable highlight of the Riyadh Season.

Zimmer expressed his gratitude to the Riyadh Season audience in a recorded message at the end of the concert, thanking them for their enthusiasm and energy.

Turki Alalshikh, chairman of the General Entertainment Authority, revealed this week that the composer is working on a new interpretation of Saudi Arabia’s national anthem. 

The post continued that the German composer was also offered the chance to create the soundtrack for the upcoming Saudi Arabia film, “The Battle of Yarmouk.”

Zimmer attended the Kingdom’s Joy Awards on Jan. 18, which honors the achievements of artists in the Arab world.


Gwen Stefani to perform in the UAE in February

Updated 25 January 2025
Follow

Gwen Stefani to perform in the UAE in February

DUBAI: US pop star Gwen Stefani is set to perform in Abu Dhabi on Feb. 21 as part of the city’s Saadiyat Nights, marking her first-ever performance in the UAE capital.

The triple Grammy Award winner will take the stage just 24 hours before legendary US singer Lionel Richie closes the event on Feb. 22.

The three-month open-air music series will also feature performances by Egyptian composer Omar Khairat on Feb. 1, British musician Sting on Feb. 3, Lebanese music icon Magida El-Roumi on Feb. 10 and US pop star Christina Aguilera on Feb. 15.

Artists who have already performed include Grammy-winning Michael Buble, Russian band Leningrad, US R&B group Boyz II Men, British singer Robbie Williams and Iranian singer Ebi.

Stefani has achieved global recognition as a songwriter, performer, and frontwoman of the US rock band No Doubt, and as a multi-platinum solo artist. Over the course of her career, she has received numerous awards, including four MTV Video Music Awards, two Billboard Awards, an American Music Award and a Brit Award.

Stefani has sold over 60 million records worldwide, combining her success with No Doubt and her solo career. Her 2004 debut solo album, “Love. Angel. Music. Baby.,” achieved multi-platinum status and included chart-topping hits like “Hollaback Girl,” which became the first digital download to sell over 1 million copies in the US.

Stefani is no stranger to Emirati culture. In 2019, she performed in Dubai at the Dubai World Cup. During her visit, the singer immersed herself in Emirati culture, embracing the quintessential tourist experience by taking a desert safari, dining in a desert tent, watching a falcon show, riding a camel, covering her face and hair with a headscarf, shopping at the perfume souk, and visiting the iconic Burj Khalifa, the world’s tallest building.

Saadiyat Nights is part of the Abu Dhabi Calendar’s year-round schedule of events, which includes music, sports, comedy, family-friendly shows, cultural festivals and art exhibitions.

Held on Saadiyat Island, the concert series is set against the backdrop of the Saadiyat Cultural District, pristine beaches, and luxurious resorts.

The inaugural edition of Saadiyat Nights, which ran from January to March 2024, featured a lineup of artists, including American stars Mariah Carey, John Legend, and Alicia Keys, Iranian singer Googoosh, and Italian tenor Andrea Bocelli.


‘Eltiqa’ returns to Riyadh with Saudi and Brazilian arts

Updated 24 January 2025
Follow

‘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
Follow

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.