Amplifying voices from Qatar’s growing national film industry, the Doha Film Institute’s (DFI) 9th Ajyal Film Festival will showcase 10 inspiring films by Qatari directors and Qatar-based filmmakers as part of the popular ‘Made in Qatar’ programme presented by Ooredoo.
Unlocking opportunities for emerging home-grown creators to join the global film community, Made in Qatar, returns as one of the most highly-anticipated segments of Ajyal. The one-of-a-kind platform for aspiring filmmakers draws on the immersive power of cinema to drive the creation of original and compelling content from our region and foster global understanding through artistic dialogue.
The 10 shorts will vie for the Made in Qatar Awards, chosen by a jury which includes American actress Sheila Vand, Executive Board Member and CEO of Katara Studios Ahmed Al Baker, and Farah Nabulsi, Palestinian-British Oscar-nominated and BAFTA award-winning filmmaker of The Present, supported by DFI.
Continuing to build on DFI’s track-record of showcasing Arab talent to an international audience, Majid Al-Remaihi and Shaima Al-Tamimi set history as the directors of the first Qatari ‘And Then They Burn The Sea’ and Yemeni ‘Don’t Get Too Comfortable’ films selected for competition at international film events of Locarno and Venice respectively.
Fatma Hassan Alremaihi, Festival Director and Chief Executive Officer of the Doha Film Institute, said:
Border (Qatar/2021) by Khalifa Al Thani is a DFI-supported film, set in an abstrusely dystopian future, where a man wishes to return to his family, but navigating the complex system becomes a near-impossible journey.Also supported by DFI, in Fever Dream (Qatar, Poland, USA/2021) by Ania Hendryx Wojtowicz, the director presents a documentary about a reality that is stranger than fiction. Sick with the coronavirus, a couple films themselves in quarantine–a five-star hotel with a sea view and sealed windows.Filmed in the aftermath of the tragic explosion that rocked the city of Beirut last August, Kan Fe Nas (Qatar, Lebanon/2021) by Mohamed Al Hamadi, documents the stories of Lebanese people as they endure daily hardships.Premiering in the Orizzonti Shorts Film Competition at Venice 2021, Shaima Al-Tamimi’s Don’t Get Too Comfortable (Yemen, UAE, USA, Netherlands, Qatar), contemplates the continuous pattern of movement amongst Yemenis in the diaspora and highlights the collective feeling of statelessness and belonging by migrants through introspective letters written to her grandfather.A Lens Under Water (Qatar/2021) by Fatma Zahra Abderrahim, takes an eye-opening and colourful dive into the teeming coastal waters of Qatar with underwater photographer Faisal Jarkas.DFI supported Virtual Voice (Qatar, Sudan/2021) by Suzannah Mirghani, is a digital-savvy and satirical review of our online times, in which viewers meet Suzi doll, an ego-warrior marching to the algorithms of social media–another vacuous virtual voice, echoing injustices.Atlal (Remnants) (Qatar/2021) by Balkees Al-Jaafari and Tony El Ghazal, follows a wistful Palestinian man who embarks on a trip down memory lane to the pivotal locations of his life in Qatar– all of which now lay abandoned.Recipient of the Qatari Film Fund, And Then They Burn the Sea, by Majid Al Remaihi, is an ode to Al-Remaihi’s mother, who suffered from gradual and terminal memory loss over the course of many years. The film screened in the Pardi Di Domani category in Locarno and has recently been selected for the Short Documentary competition at Carthage Cinema Days in Tunisia. When Beirut was Beirut (Qatar, Lebanon/2021) by Alessandra El Chanti, is an animated documentary, in which three of Beirut’s monumental buildings come to life and share their stories of Beirut’s unsettling history.A DFI Qatari Film Fund recipient Olayan (Qatar/2021) by Khalifa Al-Marri, follows a Bedouin boy named Hamad who forms a bond with a new-born camel, who he calls Olayan. When Olayan is later sold to market, young Hamad embarks on a mission to rescue his friend. Khalifa has previously won a MiQ Jury Award for his short Man of the House at Ajyal 2015.
The Made in Qatar programme will premiere on 9 November at 7:30 pm at Katara Drama Theatre, Building 16 followed by a screening at 8:30 pm at Katara Opera House, Building 16, and will screen on 11 November at 8:30 pm at VOX Cinemas, Doha Festival City.
Tickets for the 9th Ajyal Film Festival are available for purchase online at ajyalfilm.com, with the exception of screenings at Vox cinemas for which tickets can be purchased directly from the Vox box office. Prices vary depending on screening and location, and a maximum of six tickets may be purchased per person. Qatar Museum’s Culture Pass members are able to redeem a 20% discount on tickets sold by DFI.
2021 Ajyal Film Festival’s Official Partners include: Katara Cultural Village Foundation – Cultural Partner; Qatar National Tourism Council – Principal Partner; Ooredoo – Strategic partner; Qatari Diar, Msheireb Properties, W Doha – Signature Sponsors.
Related: Ajyal Film Festival 2021 to showcase 85 inspiring films from 44 countries
Source: Doha Film Institute Press Release
Cover image: DFI/Border by Khalifa Al Thani
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