Submission (2004 film)
Submission | |
---|---|
Written by | Ayaan Hirsi Ali |
Directed by | Theo van Gogh |
Theme music composer | Theo van Gogh |
Country of origin | Netherlands |
Original language | English |
Production | |
Producers | Theo van Gogh Gijs van de Westelaken |
Cinematography | Theo van Gogh |
Editor | Theo van Gogh |
Running time | 10 minutes |
Budget | €18,000 |
Original release | |
Network | VPRO |
Release |
|
Submission is a 2004 English-language Dutch short drama film produced and directed by Theo van Gogh, and written by Ayaan Hirsi Ali (a former member of the Dutch House of Representatives for the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy); it was shown on the Dutch public broadcasting network (VPRO) on 29 August 2004. The film's title is one of the possible translations of the Arabic word "Islam" (see also the etymology and meaning of the word). A Muslim fundamentalist reacted to the film by assassinating Van Gogh.
Content
The film tells the story of four fictional characters played by a single actress wearing a veil,[2] but clad in a see-through chador, her naked body painted with verses from the Quran.[1] The characters are Muslim women who have been abused in various ways. The film contains monologues of these women and dramatically highlights three verses of the Koran describing marital good bearings and role of a man and a woman in a pious relationship and rules governing divorce and reconciliations and citing certain superiority of man over woman in a complex way, open to varied interpretations (4:34 2:222 and 24:2), by showing them painted on women’s bodies.
Motivation
Writer Hirsi Ali has said "it is written in the Koran a woman may be slapped if she is disobedient. This is one of the evils I wish to point out in the film".[3] In an answer to a question about whether the film would offend Muslims, Hirsi Ali said that "if you're a Muslim woman and you read the Koran, and you read in there that you should be raped if you say 'no' to your husband, that is offensive. And that is insulting."[4]
Director of the film, Theo Van Gogh, who was known as a highly controversial and provocative personality,[5][6] called the film a "political pamphlet."[7]
Reception
The film drew praise for portraying the ways in which women are abused in accordance with fundamentalist Islamic law, as well as anger for criticising Islamic canon itself.[8] It drew the following comment from movie critic Phill Hall, "Submission was bold in openly questioning misogyny and a culture of violence against women because of Koranic interpretations. The questions raised in the film deserve to be asked: is it divine will to assault or kill women? Is there holiness in holding women at substandard levels, denying them the right to free will and independent thought? And ultimately, how can such a mindframe exist in the 21st century?"[2] Film critic Dennis Lim, on the other hand, stated that, "It's depressing to think that this morsel of glib effrontery could pass as a serious critique of conservative Islam."[9] Another (unnamed) critic referred to the stories told in the film as "simplistic, even caricatures".[8]
After the film's broadcast on Dutch television, newspaper De Volkskrant reported claims of plagiarism against Hirsi Ali and Van Gogh, made by Internet journalist Francisco van Jole. Van Jole said the duo had "aped" the ideas of Iranian American video artist Shirin Neshat. Neshat's work, which made abundant use of Arabic text projected onto bodies, had been shown in the Netherlands in 1997 and 2000.
Assassination of Theo Van Gogh
On 2 November 2004, van Gogh was assassinated in public by Mohammed Bouyeri, a Dutch-Moroccan Muslim with a Dutch passport. A letter,[10] stabbed through and affixed to the body by a dagger, linked the murder to Van Gogh's film and his views regarding Islam. It was addressed to Ayaan Hirsi Ali and called for a jihad against kafir (Kafir is a disbeliever or infidel), against America, Europe, the Netherlands, and Hirsi Ali herself. Following the murder of Van Gogh, tens of thousands gathered in the center of Amsterdam to mourn Van Gogh's death. There were fire-bombings of mosques and Muslim schools, and counterattacks against Christian churches. Besides Bouyeri, eleven other Muslim men were arrested and charged with conspiracy to assassinate Hirsi Ali.[11]
After van Gogh's murder, Submission gained international fame. It was withdrawn from the International Film Festival Rotterdam. The film had been scheduled to be shown on Sunday during a discussion on freedom of speech in film at the festival. Because of van Gogh's violent death, the producer of Submission, Gijs van de Westelaken, said, "We do not want to take any chance of endangering anyone else who participated in the film."[12] The film was shown on television in three European countries.[13]
Hirsi Ali has stated she would like to make a sequel because "By not making Submission Part II, I would only be helping terrorists believe that if they use violence, they're rewarded with what they want." When asked if she would submit to threats against her life, she said "Not me."[14]
See also
- Women in Muslim societies
- Other controversies
- Charlie Hebdo terror attack killing over 12 people in Paris because of Charlie Hebdo cartoons
- Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy; began after twelve editorial cartoons (most of which depicted Muhammad) were published in the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten in 2005
- The Satanic Verses controversy; heated and frequently violent reaction of some Muslims to the publication of Salman Rushdie's 1988 novel The Satanic Verses in the UK
- The Calcutta Quran Petition, a controversy about a petition to ban the Quran [15]
- South Park depiction of Muhammad; in which South Park creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone were targeted by a radical Muslim group for satirizing the censorship of Muhammed's image
- The Sudanese teddy bear blasphemy case; the arrest, trial, conviction, and imprisonment of a British schoolteacher in Sudan in 2007, for allegedly insulting Islam by allowing her class to name a teddy bear "Muhammad"
References
- ^ a b Hirsi Ali, Ayaan (14 May 2005). "SPIEGEL Interview with Hirsi Ali: "We Must Declare War on Islamist Propaganda"" (Interview). Retrieved 2 November 2014.
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suggested) (help) - ^ a b "Film Threat - The Bootleg Files: "submission"".
- ^ "Dutch News Digest".
- ^ Slaughter And 'Submission', Creator Of Dutch Film Vows Sequel Despite Muslim Death Threats - CBS News
- ^ Lim, Dennis: The Village Voice, 16 November 2004 "he was most famous for being a radical-libertarian loudmouth. A political columnist who got fired from almost every newspaper in the country, he delighted in blurring the line between free speech and hatemongering—he insisted on calling conservative Muslims 'goatfuckers.'"
- ^ Review of Submission by Phil Hall "In his own career, van Gogh was a minor figure within Dutch culture who was known for writing rude political columns and creating films designed to challenge the sensibilities of Dutch audiences–which was no mean feat, given that nation’s excessively liberal social environment."
- ^ Simons, Marlese. "Ex-Muslim turns her lens on a taboo", The New York Times " 'Of course it's a political pamphlet; that's undeniable,' said Theo van Gogh, who directed the film and insisted....."
- ^ a b "Ex-Muslim turns her lens on a taboo". theovangogh.nl.
- ^ Dennis Lim (22 January 2008). "The Day I Became a Martyr: Islam Protest Brings Fatal Fatwa".
- ^ 'Jihad Manifesto' - A call to destroy America and all "unbelievers", English translation - letter left on van Gogh's body by the militant Islamist killer, Militant Islam Monitor.org, 5 November 2004
- ^ Slaughter And 'Submission' - Creator Of Dutch Film Vows Sequel Despite Muslim Death Threats, CBS, 20 August 2006
- ^ Submission: Part I (2004) (TV) - News
- ^ Televisions stations that have aired the film include VPRO (the Netherlands, 29 August 2004), DR (Denmark, 11 November 2004), and RAI (Italy, 12 May 2005).
- ^ Slaughter And 'Submission', Creator Of Dutch Film Vows Sequel Despite Muslim Death Threats - CBS News
- ^ "Freedom of Speech: Wilders, Orwell, and the "Koran Ban"". Dr. Andrew Bostom.
External links
- 2004 films
- 2000s documentary films
- 2000s drama films
- 2000s short films
- Dutch films
- Dutch documentary films
- Dutch drama films
- Dutch short films
- English-language films
- Films directed by Theo van Gogh
- Documentary films about violence against women
- Documentary films critical of Islam
- Islam-related controversies in Europe
- 2004 in Islam