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One Last Thing with Sarah Taibah: 'Phoebe Waller-Bridge is my dream dinner guest'
One Last Thing with Sarah Taibah: 'Phoebe Waller-Bridge is my dream dinner guest'

The National

time26-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The National

One Last Thing with Sarah Taibah: 'Phoebe Waller-Bridge is my dream dinner guest'

Few artists capture the evolving spirit of Saudi storytelling quite like Sarah Taibah. A writer, actor and filmmaker from Jeddah - who was recently spotted on the red carpet at the Cannes Film Festival - Taibah has become one of the most compelling voices in the region's creative renaissance. Best known as the creator and star of Jameel Jeddan – the dark comedy series on MBC's Shahid that quickly gained a devoted following – she has built a career on challenging expectations and centring complex portrayals of Saudi women. More recently, she starred in the critically acclaimed Mandoob (Night Courier), which premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival. Equally comfortable behind the camera, Taibah co-wrote Hwjn, the biggest Saudi foray into fantasy filmmaking, based on the bestselling novel by Ibraheem Abbas. As we speak, she has just wrapped shooting A Matter of Life and Death, a feature she wrote and co-stars in alongside Yaqoub Al Farhan. In a matter not quite of life and death, we asked her to take our quick-fire questionnaire. What is your favourite time of day and why? First thing in the morning, because it gives me the feeling that I still have a whole day ahead of me and that there's so much to look forward to and it's not ending soon. I love beginnings. What is your favourite restaurant anywhere in the world? Any tapas place in Barcelona. When was the first time you realised your parents were human? When they asked for help. What do you want to be when you grow up? I don't want to forget myself. I'd say I want to remain honest. As a human and as an artist. Do you have any hidden talents? Well, it's not so hidden, but I skateboard. Your favourite book? I can't say it's my favourite, but it's the one that affected me most – The Power of Now: A Guide to Spiritual Enlightenment by German author Eckhart Tolle. What type of music can't you stand? Hard techno. What puts you in a bad mood? Super loud voices. What can you not live without? My own space. Dream dinner guests? British actress and writer Phoebe Waller-Bridge, one on one. Sitting on the sofa or out with friends? Lately, on the sofa. What smell takes you straight back to childhood? Not really childhood, but I would say back to my early teenage years, Versace Crystal Noir – it was the first perfume I wore in high school and it stayed with me for a while. What food takes you back to childhood? Instant noodles. Which city do you love, but would hate to live in? Cairo. Can you play a musical instrument? No, I can't. Have you ever been on a motorcycle? Yes, a lot, with my brother on the bridge in San Francisco when I used to study there. Any words to live by? Let it be. Biggest pet peeve? Bragging. Do you believe in aliens? I do. What is your favourite Arabic word? Helem, because it means two of my favourite things at the same time – dream; but also being soft, kind and patient. All in one. The most niche thing you watch on YouTube? How slugs mate. How do you take your tea? Sometimes with basil. Sometimes with milk. What makes you cry? So many things. What do social algorithms think you're interested in? Oh, movies. TikTok or Instagram? That's a difficult one. But if I have to choose one, it's Instagram. What is it about you that would surprise people? That I forget fast. What was the last thing you did for the first time? Well, I just fell on the red carpet for the first time.

‘Night Courier': Saudi thriller captures flipside of Riyadh's leap forward
‘Night Courier': Saudi thriller captures flipside of Riyadh's leap forward

France 24

time03-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • France 24

‘Night Courier': Saudi thriller captures flipside of Riyadh's leap forward

A rare foray into the Saudi nightlife, both swanky and seedy, Ali Kalthami's 'Night Courier' (' Mandoob ' in Arabic) centres on thirtysomething Fahad (Mohamad Aldokhei), a hapless call centre worker who takes on night shifts as a delivery man to pay his father's medical bills and support his divorced sister. Struggling to make ends meet, Fahad makes one bad choice after another, eventually ending up in the lucrative business of delivering alcohol to the well-heeled – only to fall foul of the gangs who typically run such operations. The consumption and possession of alcohol is strictly forbidden for Saudis – and punishable by fines, imprisonment and public flogging. On the black market, however, the sons of wealthy Saudi families can buy alcohol at hefty prices, reaching several hundred euros for a bottle of whisky. Such deliveries usher Fahad into the luxury world of Riyadh's partying elite, resulting in a dizzying and deeply disturbing encounter for the devout Muslim. Kalthami's camera exposes the brutal contrast between his clients' swanky penthouses and the shabby outer suburbs he lives in, capturing a vivid snapshot of a rapidly changing city. A city 'kind to nobody' In mining the themes of poverty, social disparity and alcohol trafficking, 'Night Courier' tackles head-on the social and economic realities of contemporary Saudi Arabia, an oil-rich Gulf state where fossil fuels are far from benefitting everyone. In 2023, some 13.6% of Saudis were living below the poverty line, according to the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia (ESCWA). 'The film describes situations I experienced myself,' says Kalthami, who grew up in a poor district of Riyadh, a sprawling and fast-changing metropolis he describes as 'kind to nobody'. At 41, the filmmaker is one of the faces of the cultural 'openness' touted by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the kingdom's de facto ruler, who has identified cinema and the arts as means to overhaul the image of a country long associated with repressive social policies. Released domestically in late 2023, 'Night Courier' proved to be a commercial hit at home, topping the box office with more than 600,000 sales – an unprecedented achievement for a native film in a country that only lifted a ban on cinemas in 2017. A burgeoning film industry The movie's commercial and critical success caught the eye of the Netflix platform, which released it in the wider region last September. 'With about three to five feature films produced in a year, Saudi cinema is still in its infancy – but it's experiencing a boom,' says Maxime Bos, a former French diplomat who lived in Saudi Arabia for seven years, where he worked in the cultural field. 'There are many young directors, including female directors, and they have unexpected things to say,' he adds. Bos says the country's fledgling industry is 'in the process of structuring itself', with the emergence of writers, cinematographers, music composers and other jobs critical to the sector. Film workers enjoy the backing of the Saudi culture ministry, which supports training programmes, co-productions, creative residencies and the promotion of homegrown talent abroad. The industry can also rely on the growing clout of the Red Sea Film Festival, a star-studded showcase for Saudi film and a key instrument of the country's cultural soft power, whose eponymous foundation helped support 'Night Courier'. An outlet for youth The emergence of the Saudi film industry has gone hand in hand with its relative liberalisation, with the likes of Kalthami delving into societal issues that would previously have been taboo. 'By giving a green light to 'Night Courier', Saudi authorities want to prove that Saudi cinema and artistic life truly exist, and that they allow things to be shown,' says Karim Sader, a political analyst and consultant specialising in the Gulf countries. 'But it's not like the film is destroying the country's image,' Sader cautions. 'It tells the story of one man's marginality. It raises a social issue but does not undermine the government. It remains a controlled gesture of openness.' In a country where 60% of the population is under 30, Crown Prince bin Salman is banking on support from ultra-connected youth who are steeped in Western culture and yearning to shape their own narratives, adds the consultant. 'MBS has chosen to give them this 'privilege' of sorts, to have their own cinema, their own stories, their own outlet,' he says. 'The aim, perhaps, is also to ward off the frustrations that elsewhere boiled over into the Arab Spring uprisings.'

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