Cinema of Palestine

Cinema of Palestine is relatively young in comparison to Arab cinema as a whole. Palestinian films are not exclusively produced in Arabic and some are even produced in English and French.[3] Elia Suleiman has emerged as one of the most notable working Palestinian directors.[4]

Cinema of Palestine
No. of screens2 (2007)[1]
  Per capita0.1 per 100,000 (2007)[1]
Number of admissions (2007)[2]
Total64,026

History

The first period: The beginning, 1935–1948

Villagers of Halhul waiting for an open-air film show, around 1940

The first Palestinian film to be made is generally believed to be a documentary on King Ibn Saud of Saudi Arabia's visit in 1935 to Palestine, made by Ibrahim Hassan Sirhan (or Serhan), based in Jaffa.[5][6] Sirhan followed the King and around Palestine, "from Lod to Jaffa and from Jaffa to Tel Aviv". The result was a silent movie that was presented at the Nabi Rubin festivals. Following this documentary, Sirhan joined Jamal al-Asphar to produce a 45-minute film called The Realized Dreams, aiming to "promote the orphans' cause". Sirhan and al-Asphar also produced a documentary about Ahmad Hilmi Pasha, a member of the Higher Arab Commission.[5][7] In 1945 Sirhan established the Arab Film Company with Ahmad Hilmi al-Kilani. The company launched the feature film Holiday Eve, which was followed by preparations for the next film A Storm at Home. The films themselves were lost in 1948, when Sirhan had to flee Jaffa after the town was bombarded.[8]

The second period: The epoch of silence, 1948–1967

The 1948 Palestinian expulsion and flight (known in Arabic as the Nakba) had a devastating effect on Palestinian society, including its nascent film industry. Cinematic endeavours, requiring infrastructure, professional crews, and finance, nearly ceased for two decades.[9] Individual Palestinian participated in the film-production of neighbouring countries. It is reported that Sirhan was involved with the production of the first Jordanian feature film, The Struggle in Jarash (1957), and another Palestinian, Abdallah Ka'wash, directed the second Jordanian feature film, My Homeland, My Love, in 1964.[10]

The third period: Cinema in exile, 1968–1982

After 1967, Palestinian cinema found itself under the auspices of the PLO, funded by Fatah and other Palestinian organisations like PFLP and DFLP. More than 60 films were made in this period, mostly documentaries. The first film festival dedicated to Palestinian films was held in Baghdad in 1973, and Baghdad also hosted the next two Palestinian film festivals, in 1976 and 1980.[11] Mustafa Abu Ali was one of the early Palestinian film directors, and he helped found the Palestinian Cinema Association in Beirut in 1973. Only one dramatic movie was made during the period, namely Return to Haifa in 1982, an adaptation of a short novel by Ghassan Kanafani.[12]

The film archives disappearance, 1982

Different organisations set up archives for Palestinian films. The largest such archive was run by PLO's Film Foundation/Palestinian Film Unit. In 1982, when the PLO was forced out of Beirut, the archive was put into storage (in the Red Crescenty Hospital), from where it "disappeared" under circumstances which are still unclear.[13] Recently, several films from the archive were located in the Israel Defense Forces Archive in Tel HaShomer by scholar and curator Rona Sela.[14] Sela has called for the release of these films, and for the declassification of other Palestinian films that remain closed in the IDF Archive.[15]

The fourth period: The return home, from 1980 to the present

The 1996 drama/comedy Chronicle of a Disappearance received international critical acclaim,[16] and it became the first Palestinian movie to receive national release in the United States.[17] A break-out film for its genre, it won a New Director's Prize at the Seattle International Film Festival and a Luigi De Laurentiis Award at the Venice Film Festival.[18] Notable film directors of this period include[19] Michel Khleifi, Rashid Masharawi, Ali Nassar and Elia Suleiman.

An international effort was launched in 2008 to reopen Cinema Jenin, a cinema located in the Jenin Refugee Camp.

In 2008, three Palestinian feature films and an estimated eight shorts were completed, more than ever before.[20]

In 2010, Hamas, the governing authority in the Gaza Strip, announced the completion of a new film. Titled The Great Liberation, the film depicts the destruction of Israel by Palestinians.[21]

Currently in the Gaza Strip, all film projects must be approved by Hamas' Culture Ministry before they can be screened in public. Independent filmmakers have claimed that the Culture Ministry cracks down on content not conforming to Hamas edicts. In a notable 2010 case, Hamas banned the short film Something Sweet, directed by Khalil al-Muzzayen, which was submitted at the Cannes Film Festival. Hamas banned it from being shown locally due to a four-second scene where a woman is shown with her hair uncovered. In 2011, a film festival hosted by the Gaza Women's Affairs Center included documentaries and fictional pieces on women's issues, but the Culture Ministry censored numerous scenes. One film had to remove a scene where a woman lowered one shoulder of her dress, and another had to remove a scene of a man swearing.[22]

Notable directors

Emad Burnat is a Palestinian farmer and filmmaker.

Notable films

The Alhambra Cinema in Jaffa, 1937, bombed December 1947[23]

Notable film festivals

A

B

C

D

H

K

L

M

R

S

  • Muestra de Cine Palestino de Santiago (Santiago Palestine Film Festival)
  • Muestra de Cine Palestino de Sevilla (Sevilla Palestine Film Festival)

T

See also

References

  1. "Table 8: Cinema Infrastructure - Capacity". UNESCO Institute for Statistics. Archived from the original on 24 December 2018. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  2. "Table 11: Exhibition - Admissions & Gross Box Office (GBO)". UNESCO Institute for Statistics. Archived from the original on 25 December 2018. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  3. "Palestine Film Foundation". www.palestinefilm.org. Archived from the original on June 12, 2008.
  4. Brooks, Xan (12 April 2006). "Xan Brooks on Palestinian directors". the Guardian. Retrieved 9 July 2018.
  5. Gertz and Khleifi, p. 13
  6. Dabashi (2006), p. 9
  7. Khaled Elayya: A Brief History of Palestinian Cinema Archived 2014-02-21 at the Wayback Machine, This week in Palestine
  8. Gertz and Khleifi, p. 13-14
  9. Gertz and Khleifi, p. 19
  10. Gertz and Khleifi, p. 20
  11. Joseph Massad: The weapon of Culture: Cinema in the Palestinian liberation struggle. Ch . 2 in Dabashi (2006), p. 33, 36
  12. Gertz and Khleifi, p. 20-30
  13. Gertz and Khleifi, p. 28-30
  14. Sela, Rona (2017-06-01). "Seized in Beirut: The Plundered Archives of the Palestinian Cinema Institution and Cultural Arts Section". Anthropology of the Middle East. 12 (1): 83–114. doi:10.3167/ame.2017.120107. ISSN 1746-0727.
  15. Sela, Rona (3 March 2017). "The Genealogy of Colonial Plunder and Erasure – Israel's Control over Palestinian Archives". Social Semiotics. 28 (2): 201–229. doi:10.1080/10350330.2017.1291140. S2CID 149369385.
  16. Chronicle of a Disappearance. All Movie Guide. Accessed June 7, 2009.
  17. Chronicle of a Disappearance. Artforum. Summer, 1997.
  18. Awards for Chronicle of a Disappearance. Imdb.com Accessed June 7, 2009.
  19. Gertz and Khleifi, p. 30-34
  20. "Palestinian filmmakers beat the odds to hit silver screen". Edition.cnn.com. Retrieved 9 July 2018.
  21. "Israel News - The Jerusalem post". Jpost.com. Retrieved 9 July 2018.
  22. "Gaza filmmakers decry Hamas censorship". Ynetnews. 19 August 2011. Retrieved 9 July 2018.
  23. List of Irgun attacks
  24. "Poppies of Palestine Film Festival - Kuwait". 248am. Retrieved 21 May 2021.

Further reading

32.0519°N 34.7594°E / 32.0519; 34.7594

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