Female Arab Filmmakers Shine at Virtual Cannes Film Festival

Three women from Lebanon, Egypt, and Algeria have overcome cultural barriers and systemic gender inequalities in their countries of origin and in the film industry to feature at the 2020 Cannes Film Festival. 

Of the 56 films that made it through to this year’s final selection, Danielle Arbid, Ayten Amin, and Maiwen flew the flag for the Middle East and North Africa at this year’s “peculiar” edition of the iconic festival held online from June 22 to June 26. They were selected from an initial pool of 2067 films, 532 of which were made by women. 

Their achievement is all the more impressive given the level of gender inequality and cultural barriers the three women have had to overcome in their home countries to make films.  

Arab women’s stories on the Cannes Silver Screen 

Lebanese filmmaker Danielle Arbid has been based in Paris for the last 30 years. Her Cannes selection is “Passion Simple” (Simple Passion) based on the 1992 novel by Annie Ernaux. The film tells the story of a passionate romance between a housewife and her Russian diplomat lover, and unlike Arbid’s previous films, has no links to Lebanon.

Arbid says she was making films long before #MeToo does not believe there is a “feminine or masculine” cinema, but admits her gender certainly has not been a great help, particularly back in Lebanon. 

“No one helped me professionally because of my Lebanese origins or because I am a woman—certainly not in Lebanon, where most of my work is censored, or in the Arab world,” she told Arab News

“Being a woman hasn’t proved a hindrance in filmmaking. The female representation at Cannes is still not entirely satisfactory, but at last we’re moving in the right direction,” she said. 

For Egyptian director Ayten Amin, the gender gap in Egypt, both in terms of opportunity and remuneration, is clear: “Being a woman cinema is definitely a hindrance.” 

“I have to prove myself every time, as though every project is my first. I’ve had more successes than several of my male colleagues, but they’ve had more opportunities than me and — despite my track record — they’re much better paid.”

Amin says that making films in the increasingly conservative North African country is difficult for everyone and argues more local and European funding is needed to allow the Arab world to tell its stories on the silver screen. 

At the end of the day, she argues that she is “always on the side of a good film regardless of gender,” and says her Cannes selection “Souad” would not have been possible without the support of her enthusiastic friend-turned-producer Sameh Awad. 

“Souad,” directed by Amin and produced by the doyen of Tunisian cinema, Dora Bouchoucha, is an essentially feminine family drama that tells the story of 19-year-old Souad and her little sister, 12-year-old Rabab, who are from a conservative family. Souad’s suicide sets Rabab off on a quest to uncover her sister’s secret online life and find answers about her tragic death.

The third Arab voice represented in this year’s Cannes selection is herself no stranger to family drama. French-Algerian director Maiwenn says her mother, the renowned Algerian actress Catherine Belkhodja, “only loved me on the silver screen.”

Maiwenn was a prominent voice of the #MeToo movement. After winning the 2011 Prix de Jury for “Polisse,” she returned to Cannes in 2020 with her film “DNA.” Like “Polisse,” Maiwenn also plays the lead, Neige, in “DNA,” a film deeply rooted in her Algerian heritage. The death of Neige’s adored grandfather Emir triggers a dramatic family identity crisis that the bereft woman is forced to navigate.  

Digital Festival Fails to Hit Diversity Target

This week, Cannes Film Festival has been doing its best to “mirror” the normal festival experience through its inaugural online “Marché du Film” (Film Market), after the global COVID-19 pandemic put a stop to the physical festival going ahead.   

“No one knows what the second half of the year may bring and whether it will be possible to organize major film events again in 2020, including the Festival de Cannes,” said Cannes General Delegate Andre Fremaux on June 3, when he unveiled the festival’s official selection of films.

“Cannes has therefore decided to adapt its format for this peculiar year,” he said. 

When presenting the 2020 selection, Fremaux also pointed out that although the total number of films submitted by women directors was slightly down on 2019’s figures, (532 compared to 572), the ratio of female-made films in the selection was up. 

“The number of female directors included in the Selection shows a significant increase,” Fremaux said. 

“We will have 16 female directors in the selection. They were 14 in 2019, 11 in 2018, 12 in 2017, 9 in 2016, and 6 in 2015. In percentage, this number is 28.5% of the selection, higher than last year (23.7%) and, above all, higher than the percentage of female directors submitting movies to the selection.”

Since 2018, spurred on by the #MeToo movement, feminists have been calling for greater equality in the film industry through initiatives like Collectif 50/50 for Cannes 2020.

The year is now 2020 and while the Cannes panel selected a record number of female-directed films it is still eons away from the parity the Collectif is fighting for.  

While the Collectif’s target fell short this year, Arbid, Amin, and Maiwen are nevertheless a bright spot in a year that has been difficult for the film industry in general and a painful reminder that it is still shatteringly un-diverse.

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Egypt Set to Reopen Airports, Welcome Tourists Starting July 1

On Sunday the Egyptian Civil Aviation Minister Mohamed Manar announced the country would reopen all of its airports to regular international services from July 1 after closing them in mid-March due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The move is a win for Egypt’s flailing tourism sector and a group of Belarusian visitors, who are set to be the first to benefit from Egypt’s Red Sea coast this summer when they arrive in Hurghada on July 4. 

During a press conference on June 14, the civil aviation minister, along with Tourism Minister Khaled El Anani and Information Minister Osama Haikal, said flights will gradually resume from the beginning of July, to the delight of struggling tourism operators. Tourism is a major employer in Egypt and accounts for between 5% and 12% of GDP, but has faced a difficult decade rocked by the 2011 revolution, terrorism, and now COVID-19.  

To facilitate the resumption of flights, Egypt has put in place a “comprehensive plan” that takes “into account the safety of citizens and tourists alike,” Haikal said. International tourists will initially only be allowed to visit Egypt’s three “touristic provinces” along the Red Sea — South Sinai, the Red Sea, and Marsa Matrouh governorates — but the restrictions will gradually be eased, the trio said. 

“Passengers will be required to finalize several measures before boarding their plane to Egypt, including signing an acknowledgment document specifying the Egyptian city they plan to visit before receiving their boarding cards,” Manar explained. 

“Passengers coming from countries announced to be affected by the pandemic shall submit a fresh PCR [COVID-19] test no later than 48 hours before their flights,” he added.

Travelers, the airplanes they arrive on, airports, and hotels will all be subject to strict sterilization and disinfection regimes, while passengers and crew will be required to wear masks and maintain social distancing during boarding and while exiting the plane, the civil aviation minister noted.  

The Egyptian government is also offering a number of incentives to entice travelers back. The government is subsidizing aviation fuel, temporarily removing tourist visas and their $25 fee, reducing airport fees and taxes by 50%, and cutting the admission price for Supreme Council of Antiquities sites by 20%.  

The Tourism Minister said he will brief his Arab counterparts on Egypt’s re-opening plans, and hopes to encourage tourists from the Arab world back quickly. Anani has also been in talks with his Belarusian counterpart, and those of fellow Eastern European nations Serbia and Ukraine. 

As a result of a recent virtual meeting between the tourism ministers, a flight carrying eager Belarusian tourists is set to become the first group of foreign visitors to return to post-COVID-19 Egypt when they land at Hurghada Airport along the Red Sea on July 4. Egypt is a top tourism destination for Belarusian travelers, 90% of which visit the coastal resorts located in the picturesque Red Sea and South Sinai governorates, according to the Red Sea Tourism Investors Association.

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