36th Cairo International Film Festival
Opening film | November 9, 2014 |
---|---|
Closing film | November 18, 2014 |
Location | Cairo Citadel, Cairo, Egypt |
Film titles | 155 |
Editor-in-chief | Yousra |
The 36th Cairo International Film Festival (Arabic: مهرجان القاهرة السينمائي السادس والثلاثون) was held from November 9–18, 2014, including 17 films from ten Arab countries. Six films featured were nominated for the 87th Academy Awards the following year.[1] The jury included four male and four female filmmakers representing the Middle East, Asia, Africa, and Europe as well as the disciplines of direction, screenwriting, production, cinematography, and criticism, headed by Egyptian actress Yousra.
Background
[edit]Festival management chose Yousra as the first Egyptian jury chair in the history of the Festival.[2] animated and a documentary films also made their first appearances with one of each. Another unprecedented move was hiring an Egyptian designer, Karim Adam, to design the official poster, featuring local actress Nadia Lutfi.[3]
Lutfi received a special Lifetime Achievement Award during the opening ceremony, and the Festival prepared a documentary on her career that was shown on the second day. The first submissions in Festival history opened from the United Arab Emirates (Ali F. Mostafa’s From A to B) and Iran (Abed Abest’s The Corner).[4]
Egyptian films featured
[edit]Six Egyptian films were featured at the Festival. The International Features category included Karim Hanafi’s Bab Al-Wadaa (“The Farewell Gate”), starring Salwa Khattab and Ahmed Magdy. The Short Film category featured Ahmed Abdalla’s Décor, starring Kal Naga and Horeya Farghaly, along with Mouhamed Rady’s Wall of Heroism. The Classics category showed a restored version of Henry Barakat’s 1965 film The Sin in honor of what would have been his 100th birthday. Finally, the late director and singer-actor Hussein al-Imam’s black-and-white film Like a Matchstick was screened.[5]
Juries
[edit]International Competition
[edit]- Yousra, Egyptian actress (Chair)
- Wang Xiaoshuai, Chinese director, whose Red Amnesia was screened here and at the 71st Venice International Film Festival the same year
- Haile Gerima, Ethiopian director
- Corinne van Egeraat, Dutch actress-writer-producer
- Ibrahim Al-Ariss, Lebanese critic
- Alexis Grivas, Greek cinematographer
- Dominique Cabrera, French director
- Mariam Naoum, Egyptian screenwriter
- Nancy Abdel-Fattah, Egyptian cinematographer
International Critics’ Week
[edit]- Laila Elwi, Egyptian actress (Chair)
- Mohamed Reda, Lebanese critic
- Najib Ayyad, Tunisian producer
Horizons of Arab Cinema
[edit]- Khamis Al-Khayati, Tunisian critic (Chair)
- Deborah Young, American critic
- Barbara Löwe, German critic
Films
[edit]International
[edit]Title | Director | Country |
---|---|---|
Bab Al-Wadaa | Karim Hanafi | Egypt |
Eyes of a Thief | Najwa Najjar | Palestine |
Through a Lens Darkly | Thomas Allen Harris | United States |
We Come as Friends | Hubert Sauper | France |
Boy and the World | Alê Abreu | Brazil |
Charlie's Country | Rolf de Heer | Australia |
Love at First Fight | Thomas Cailley | France |
Red, Blue, Yellow | Nujoom Al-Ghanem | United Arab Emirates |
Giovanni's Island | Mizuho Nishikubo | Japan |
Forever | Margarita Manda | Greece |
And There Was Evening and There Was Morning | Emanuele Caruso | Italy |
Sand Dollars | Laura Amelia Guzmán and Israel Cárdenas | Dominican Republic |
Melbourne | Nima Javidi | Iran |
Five Star | Keith Miller | United States |
Miss Brackets, the Baby-sitter, the Bastard Grandson, and Emma Suarez | Sergio Candel | Spain |
The Blinding Sunlight | Yu Liu | China |
International Critics’ Week
[edit]Title | Director | Country |
---|---|---|
* No One's Child | Vuk Ršumović | Serbia/Croatia |
* Costa da Morte | Lois Patiño | Galicia (Spain) |
* Viktoria | Maya Vitkova | Bulgaria |
* Hold Your Breath Like a Lover | Kohei Igarashi | Japan |
* Brides | Tinatin Kajrishvili | Georgia |
* The Iranian Film | Yassine El Idrissi | Morocco |
* Dancing with Maria | Ivan Gergolet | Italy/Argentina |
Awards
[edit]International Competition
[edit]- Golden Pyramid Award: Melbourne, Nima Javidi
- Silver Pyramid for Best Director: Forever, Margarita Manda
- Silver Pyramid for Best Screenplay, Boy and the World, Alê Abreu
- Silver Pyramid for Best Artistic Contribution: Bab Al-Wadaa, cinematographer Zaki Aref
- Best Actor: Eyes of a Thief, Kal Naga
- Best Actress: Love at First Fight, Adele Hamlin
International Critics’ Week
[edit]The following were unanimously announced:
- Shadi Abdeslam Prize: No One's Child, Vuk Ršumović
- Fathi Farag Award for Best Artistic Contribution: Brides, Tinatin Kajrishvili
Prospects of Arab Movies
[edit]- Saad Eddine Wahba Prize (Best Artistic Contribution): Sotto Voce, Kamal Kamal (Morocco)
- Youssef Chahine Award (Best Artistic Creativity): Bab Al-Wadaa, Zaki Aref
- Salah Abu Seif Award (Best Arabic Film): Scheherazade's Diary, Zeina Daccache (Lebanon)
- Special Certificate of Appreciation: Theeb
- Naguib Mahfouz Awards (Golden Pyramid of Honor):
- Volker Schlöndorff, German director
- Noureddine Saïl, Egyptian cinematographer
- Nadia Lutfi, Egyptian actress[6]
External links
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "17 فيلماً من 10 بلدان عربية في مهرجان القاهرة السينمائي". Al Bayan. October 25, 2014. Retrieved 6 June 2021.
- ^ "" يسرا " أول فنانة وسيدة مصرية ترأس لجنة التحكيم بمهرجان القاهرة". Maspero. November 3, 2014. Retrieved 6 June 2021.
- ^ "لماذا اختار مهرجان القاهرة "عيون" نادية لطفي شعار المهرجان؟". Layalina. November 9, 2014. Retrieved 6 June 2021.
- ^ Abdelkarim, Ehab Ali (November 8, 2014). "نادية لطفي تحضر حفل افتتاح مهرجان القاهرة السينمائي الدولي غدًا". El Cinema. Retrieved 6 June 2021.
- ^ El-Sherif, Heba (September 10, 2014). "Cairo Film Festival promises fresh comeback". Al-Ahram. Retrieved 6 June 2021.
- ^ Gweida, Rasha (November 19, 2014). "الأفلام الفائزة في مهرجان القاهرة السينمائي". Erem News. Retrieved 6 June 2021.