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Syrian Migrant Drama Opens Berlin Film Festival

Syrian Migrant Drama Opens Berlin Film Festival

Asharq Al-Awsat13-02-2025

German director Tom Tykwer said Thursday that his latest movie about a Syrian immigrant aimed to encourage people to stop "isolating" themselves, as it opened Berlin's international film festival.
"The Light", screening out of competition at the Berlinale, tells the story of a middle-class Berlin family whose lives are upended when they hire a new domestic worker from Syria.
The movie marks a return to feature filmmaking after a long hiatus for Tykwer, 59, who has been focusing on the acclaimed German television series "Babylon Berlin".
In "The Light", the Engels family -- Tim, Milena and their teenage twins -- are all immersed in their separate worlds as they navigate the complexities of modern life.
But when the enigmatic Farrah, recently arrived from Syria, is placed in their home as the new housekeeper, they find themselves slowly starting to reconnect.
"Everyone is in their own aquarium with their head stuck in it," Tykwer said.
"They are stuck with their heads under water and then some energy comes from the outside and pulls them out and enables them look at each other again."
'Extra urgency'
Tykwer said the film aimed to show that better communication can help people to relate personally but also "politically".
"We have to approach each other again and stop isolating ourselves so much," he said.
The Berlinale, which ranks with Cannes and Venice among Europe's top festivals, serves as a key launchpad for films from around the world.
US writer and director Todd Haynes will head up the jury at this year's edition, with 19 pictures vying for the festival's Golden Bear top prize.
Haynes said Thursday that the world was in a "state of particular crisis" and that filmmakers had witnessed the return of US President Donald Trump "with tremendous concern, shock".
Haynes said he hoped the Berlinale, which has a reputation as the most political of the big international film festivals, would serve as a forum for digesting global events.
"This festival has always had a strength of conviction and an openness to a challenging and political discourse and bringing that into the filmmaking, and what's happening in the world right now has put an extra urgency to all of that," he told reporters.
This year's Berlinale winds up on February 23, the same day as a snap election in Germany, called after the collapse of Chancellor Olaf Scholz's governing coalition late last year.
The campaign ahead of the election has been bitterly divisive, with the far-right AfD surging in the polls.
'Resistance'
Last year, Berlinale organizers made headlines by barring five previously invited AfD politicians and telling them they were "not welcome".
Berlinale director Tricia Tuttle said cinema could be an act of "resistance... to all of the perverse ideas that many far-right parties across the whole world and across Europe are spreading".
"This is a space where we want to come together and listen to each other and communicate through cinema... I think the very fact we're all here is a resistance," she said.
Films in competition at the Berlinale include "Dreams", from Mexican director Michel Franco, about a Mexican ballet dancer, and "What Does that Nature Say to You", from South Korean arthouse favorite Hong Sang-soo.
Hollywood director Richard Linklater will present "Blue Moon", starring Ethan Hawke, 11 years after Linklater won Berlin's Silver Bear for Best Director for "Boyhood".
Romanian director Radu Jude, who won the Golden Bear in 2021, is in the running with "Kontinental '25", a dark comedy about the rise of nationalism.
And France's Lucile Hadzihalilovic will present "The Ice Tower", a fantasy drama starring Marion Cotillard.
South Korean director Bong Joon-ho will present out of competition his new film "Mickey 17" with Robert Pattinson, and British actor Tilda Swinton will receive a lifetime achievement award.

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From new Friends to big adventures: Children share what they want on their dream holidays
From new Friends to big adventures: Children share what they want on their dream holidays

Arab News

time03-05-2025

  • Arab News

From new Friends to big adventures: Children share what they want on their dream holidays

As summer approaches, a new global survey has revealed what our young travelers are dreaming about, and it's not just ice cream and cartoons. From friendship quests to superhero adventures, today's young adventurers are bringing big imagination to their travel wish lists. The survey was commissioned by Experience Abu Dhabi, the destination brand of the Department of Culture and Tourism – Abu Dhabi, polling over 7,000 children aged 5 to 12 and their parents from across nine countries, including France, Italy, Germany, China, UK, US, and India, as well as UAE and Saudi Arabia. The data reveals something both unexpected and universal: 90% of children worldwide want holiday activities that help them make new friends. In an age of screens and streaming, what kids are genuinely craving is real connection. 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Ameer Fakher Eldin: ‘I was cut off from my culture. Now I'm making films with all the Arab world'
Ameer Fakher Eldin: ‘I was cut off from my culture. Now I'm making films with all the Arab world'

Arab News

time24-04-2025

  • Arab News

Ameer Fakher Eldin: ‘I was cut off from my culture. Now I'm making films with all the Arab world'

DUBAI: Four years ago, Syrian filmmaker Ameer Fakher Eldin set out to craft a cinematic trilogy about exile — not as an abstract theme, but as a visceral, lived reality: from being a stranger among your own people, to becoming a stranger among others, and ultimately, to imagining a life unhindered by the limitations of national borders. The first chapter, 'The Stranger,' introduced us to Adnan, an unlicensed doctor lingering in a liminal space in Syria's occupied Golan Heights. The opening lines hinted at the trilogy's ambition. Standing pensively by a window, Adnan is addressed by his off-screen wife, who lists the options before them: 'France? Paris… they have delicious bread. Germany? Anywhere far from here.' Ameer Fakher Eldin at the Amman International Film Festival in July 2022. (AFP) The film, which Fakher Eldin wrote, directed, and edited, would go on to represent Palestine at the Academy Awards — a decision he describes as an 'incredible gesture' and a 'beautiful, warm embrace' from a fellow occupied people. 'Perhaps it's a different type of occupation (to the Golan Heights). We don't have the daily clashes, but occupation still runs in the waters,' he says. Now Germany has become the setting for his trilogy's second chapter 'Yunan.' Having premiered at the Berlin International Film Festival in February, where it competed for the highest prize, it is currently touring the festival circuit, building on the critical momentum of 'The Stranger.' A still from 'Yunan.' (Courtesy of Red Balloon Film GmBH, Productions Microclimat Inc, Intramovies Srl) 'Yunan' explores the emotional journey of Munir (played by Lebanese actor Georges Khabbaz), a Syrian writer living in exile in Germany. Burdened by the psychological toll of displacement, he travels to the Halligen, a series of low-lying islands off the coast of Schleswig-Holstein, where he contemplates suicide. One of the director's early inspirations was the suicide note of Stefan Zweig, a Jewish writer who fled Austria and Nazi persecution in the 1930s. Eventually settling in Brazil, he took his own life alongside his second wife, Lotte Altmann, having been left bereft by exile, the loss of his homeland, and an overwhelming sense of hopelessness. 'The character of Munir emerged from a deep exploration of the human condition,' says Fakher Eldin, who was born in Kyiv but grew up in the Golan Heights. 'I wanted to explore this quiet battle that we face within ourselves. Since I come from the occupied Golan Heights, I grew up in exile without being forced to leave. I didn't flee because of war or a national crisis — the border was displaced, leaving me displaced. I don't know Syria. I can't go to Syria. So I was left waiting for — or fantasizing about the idea of — a homeland.' A post shared by Ameer Fakher Eldin (@ As the filmmaker points out, much has been written about the odyssey of being a refugee — the danger, the despair, the journey itself. But what of being displaced? 'The time has come for us to look at what happens after,' he says. 'This is no less important. My approach was to try to anatomize the mind of the displaced person. I entered this world by connecting to the universal aspects of loss and disillusionment and the search for meaning.' It was during the initial stages of exploring these themes that he came across the Halligen and the phenomenon known as 'land unter' (land under), when the islands are submerged by the sea. Only a handful of man-made mounds topped with farmhouses remain above the water, enabling life to continue after the sea has receded. Metaphorically, land under came to reflect the structure of Yunan – that of submersion, loss, and return. 'I went to this hallig for two years while writing, getting to know the people and the culture, and I heard, of course, about the flooding,' says Fakher Eldin, who has lived in Germany for the past four years. 'I asked them: 'When does this happen? Please tell me, because I want to be here.'' He was told it could occur once a year, 20 times a year, or not at all. Most likely, however, such an event would take place between January and March. A post shared by MAD Films (@madfilmsofficial_) The team visited during those months but nothing happened. Fakher Eldin decided to use visual effects instead, working with a post-production studio in Canada to create the film's flood scenes. Then, in October, they headed back to the island for a three-week shoot. On the fourth day, a strong wind began to batter the island. 'Not every wind makes a land under. It has to be strong enough, but also blowing in a certain direction, because not every wind moves the water with the tide. 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But everything you see in the film is real.' A post shared by Ameer Fakher Eldin (@ 'Yunan,' which received support from the Red Sea Fund and the Red Sea Souk, will have its Arab premiere at the Red Sea International Film Festival in December. It will then go on general release across the Arab world. Although Fakher Eldin is currently concentrating on 'Yunan,' he has completed writing the third and final instalment, tentatively called 'Nostalgia: A Tale in First Chapters.' The film will tell the story of a renowned Arab opera singer who suddenly loses his voice and returns to the Golan Heights to convalesce. 'This has brought me a lot of joy,' says Fakher Eldin of his Red Sea funding. 'Especially with coming from the Golan Heights, where I was cut off from my culture. I can't go to Syria, I can't go to Lebanon, I can't go anywhere in the Arab world. I'm exiled in my own home. But now I'm making films with all of the Arab world. It's not only Saudi, it's Jordan, Palestine, Qatar… It's like all the Arab countries are part of my creation.' A post shared by Ameer Fakher Eldin (@ Importantly, the director has refused Israeli funding, thereby safeguarding the identity of his films. That refusal is not just political but deeply personal — rooted in a lifelong resistance to imposed narratives and erasures. 'They will never say I'm Syrian. They will only say I'm a Druze filmmaker, which is something they do to distinguish Druze from Arab, which is total nonsense. But this is what happens in Israeli media and in daily life,' he says. 'That's how they like to separate. I refuse to live under an authority that wants to erase my identity.'

London to host Saudi e-sports team Falcons Vega for women's tournament Red Bull Instalock
London to host Saudi e-sports team Falcons Vega for women's tournament Red Bull Instalock

Arab News

time01-04-2025

  • Arab News

London to host Saudi e-sports team Falcons Vega for women's tournament Red Bull Instalock

LONDON: The four teams to compete at Red Bull Instalock, the professional women's Valorant invitational tournament, have been revealed, with Saudi team Falcons Vega taking their place alongside reigning Red Bull Instalock champions G2 Gozen, FlyQuest RED, and GiantX GC at London's Red Bull Gaming Sphere on May 2-3. For the latest updates, follow us @ArabNewsSport Inaugural Red Bull Instalock champions and German electronic sports team G2 Gozen will return to defend their title, alongside British team GiantX GC, who will try to win the tournament on home soil. Falcons Vega, winners of the 2024 Saudi Women's eLeague Championship, will be making their Red Bull Instalock debut, joined by American e-sports team, FlyQuest RED. Building on the success of its first tournament in 2024, Red Bull Instalock retains its unique format. Switching up the traditional Valorant team composition, teams will be required to select three duelists, the game's offensive class guaranteeing intense plays, tactical expertise and clutch skills. The tournament will be broadcast live from London's premier gaming and e-sports venue in Shoreditch and will feature a creator exhibition match as part of the event. E-sports organisation Fnatic, which became a Red Bull partnered team in January, will also be supporting Red Bull Instalock, hosting the Official Watch Party at its headquarters in Dalston, London on Saturday, May 3. In the collaboration with Fnatic the London-based e-sports organisation will develop exclusive merchandise to celebrate the event. Ahead of the tournament, Red Bull player Michaela 'Mimi' Lintrup, member of G2 Gozen and reigning Red Bull Instalock champion, said: 'It's great to see Red Bull Instalock back for another year as a huge moment for the Game Changers calendar. I can't wait to return to London and to defend our title against some of the most amazing teams from around the world.' Red Bull Instalock will be broadcast live on Red Bull's Twitch and YouTube channels.

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