For the fourth yearin a row, the City of The Hague embraces the Arab Women’sFilm Festival, starting on Friday7March2014for the duration of three days. The film festival will take place at FilmhuisDenHaag and The American Book Center, and this year’s programme will include 14 films andthe presence of14guests: filmmakers, journalists andcritics from abroad.
The activities of the fourth edition under the theme of ‘change makers’ will begin on Friday 7March at the American Book Center with the photo exhibitionAna Ana by Egyptian photographer Wafaa Samir, the leading character of AWFF’s opening film by the same name.
Later in the evening, the opening ceremony will take place at FilmhuisDenHaag, starting with a musical performance by two outstanding Moroccan-Dutch musicians: singer Samira Dainan and guitar player Hafez Ismaili M'hamdi. The pre-premiere of the Dutch-Egyptian opening film Ana Ana will follow afterwards. This unique documentarywasreceived very well by a range of film critics and was nominated for Best Dutch Documentary at the IDFA 2013 in Amsterdam. The story isabout the inner world of four young creative Egyptian women and theeffect of the Egyptian revolution on them, followed by a Q&A with the award-winning film directors Corinne van Egeraat, Petr Lom and the leading character Wafaa Samir. The short fiction filmHaleema by German director Boris Schaarschmidt will be screened as well.
Later on the evening, the Dutch premiere of the Belgian-Moroccanfeature film Le sac de farine by Moroccan director Kadija Leclere will follow. Based on the true life of the director, the film traces the story of an eight-year-old Moroccan girl who lives in Belgium in the 1970s till her teenage years in a poverty-stricken village in the Atlas Mountains of Morocco, where she is taken to by her biological father. Silk, an American short fiction film by director Catherine Dent will be screened as part of the same programme. Furthermore, during the opening evening there will be a stand by the American Book Center with a specially selected collection of book and magazines related to the Arab countries and culture.
On the second day, Saturday8 March,the acting workshop Crash Course in Acting Basics! will be given to beginning actors and actresses between the ages of 15 and30 years by the award-winning Syrian actress, film director and producer Nadia Hamzeh.
The screening of feature-length documentary Rafea: Solar Mama will follow, directed by Mona Eldaief and Oscar-nominee Jehane Noujaim. It is about a strong-minded Bedouin woman that struggles against tradition and society as she seeks to become Jordan's first solar engineer. The documentary will be preceded by the screening of the European premiere of the Jordanian short fiction film Horizon, written and directed by Zain Duraie and the Egyptian short documentary Life by Her Hand directed by Sally Abu Basha. The screenings will be followed by a Q&A with Horizon’s film director Zain Duraie.
In the evening, the European premiere of the Lebanese feature film Void will take place, a story aboutsix Lebanese women of different ages, who await the return of their sons, brothers, husbands or lovers, who have been missing since the Civil War. The film will be preceded by the short fiction filmSanctity by Saudi director Ahd. A Q&A with one of Void’s directors Tarek Korkomaz and producers Sam Lahoud and Nicolas Khabbaz will follow at the end of the screenings.
On Sunday9 March,the third and last day ofthe fourth edition, will kick off with the retrospective programme The Palestinian woman within the film industry between then and now: What has changed? The famous and award-winning Palestinian directorandactressNisreenFaour will introduce the programme by giving a lecture. The screenings of feature films Amreeka by Palestinian filmmaker Cherien Dabis, Miral by American filmmaker JulianSchnabel and the short documentary This is the Law! by Palestinian film director Fadya Salah Al-Deenwill follow after the lecture.
During the closing evening of AWFF, the feature filmBehind Closed Doors by Moroccan director Mohammed Ahed Bensouda will be screened for the first time in the Netherlands. The story follows a woman who is a victim of sexual harassment at her place of work. She is happy in her marriage and has a stable job, till the moment that the company where she works appoints a new manager and where she starts to face many obstacles that encounter her life. Scrap, a short fiction film by Saudi director Bader Alhomoud, will be part of the closing programme as well. Both screenings will be followed by a Q&A with the directors of Behind Closed Doors and Scrap.