The purpose of the African Women in Cinema Blog is to provide a space to discuss diverse topics relating to African women in cinema--filmmakers, actors, producers, and all film professionals. The blog is a public forum of the Centre for the Study and Research of African Women in Cinema.

Le Blog sur les femmes africaines dans le cinéma est un espace pour l'échange d'informations concernant les réalisatrices, comédiennes, productrices, critiques et toutes professionnelles dans ce domaine. Ceci sert de forum public du Centre pour l'étude et la recherche des femmes africaines dans le cinémas.

ABOUT THE BLOGGER

My photo
Director/Directrice, Centre for the Study and Research of African Women in Cinema | Centre pour l'étude et la recherche des femmes africaines dans le cinéma

Translate

Search This Blog

Showing posts with label Iman Kamel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Iman Kamel. Show all posts

20 September 2017

Women at the | Frauen beim | Les Femmes au : Afrika Film Festival Köln - 21. September bis 01. Oktober 2017

WOMEN AT THE | FRAUEN BEIM | LES FEMMES AU :
AFRIKA FILM FESTIVAL KÖLN 2017

21. September bis 01. Oktober 2017
Fokus: Landgrabbing and Migration
Theme: Landgrabbing and Migration
Thème centrale : Accaparement des terries et Migration

Wendy Bashi 
Iman Djionne
Theresa Traore Dahlberg
Amina Weira
Kaouther Ben Hania
Rayhana
Soraya El Kahlaoui
Iman Kamel
Nada Mezni Hafaiedh


Fickin, 2016, 26 min



La Boxeuse | Boxing Girl, 2016, 26 min 



Ouaga Girls, 2017, 83 min



La Colère dans le vent, 2016, 54 min



Zaineb hates the snow | Zaineb n'aime pas la neige, 2016, 94 min




À mon âge je me cache encore pour fumer | I still hide to smoke, 2016, 90 min
Landless Moroccans | Marocains sans terries, 2017, 60 min



Jeanne d'Arc Masriya | Egyptian Jeanne d’Arc, 2016, 85 min



Upon the Shadow | Au delà de l'ombre, 2016, 80 min

09 June 2017

African Women in Cinema Blog: Updates | Actualités - 09 June | juin 2017 - News on the Internet | Les infos autour de l’Internet


African Women in Cinema Blog
Updates | Actualités
09 – June | juin – 2017

News around the Internet | Les infos autour de l’Internet 


Content | Contenu :

Michelle Mboya
Jihan El-Tahri
Rungano Nyoni
Iman Kamel




Michelle Mboya
Telling Untold Stories. 5 June 2017 by Natalie Makovora. Directed by Women.

Jihan El-Tahri
« Réfléchir de nouveau à notre identité collective africaine ».  2 juin 2017. Le grenier de Kabili.

Rungano Nyoni 
The Film About Feminism and Witchcraft That You Need to See. Douglas Greenwood. Another Mag.
Iman Kamel
Egyptian director Iman Kamel wins Iconic Women Award. May 2017. Ahram Online. 




24 March 2017

African Women in Cinema Blog-Updates|Actualités: 24-03-2017 - News around the Internet | Les infos autour de l’Internet

African Women in Cinema Blog
Updates | Actualités
24 - 03 – 2017

Content | Contenu :

Kaouther Ben Hania
Jihan El-Tahri
Iman Kamel
Kis Keya
Judy Kibinge


Kaouther Ben Hania (Pressreader.com, Lebanon)
A migration tale detox from Tunis. Kaouther Ben Hania’s upbeat “Zaineb Hates the Snow” defies the media narrative. Review by Jim Quilty.

Jihan El-Tahri (irepfilmfestival.com)
#iREP2017 Film Review: Egypt’s Modern Pharoahs
In Conversation with Jihan El-Tahri – Tunde Onikoyi IREP Media Team 

Iman Kamel (Filmmaker, Writer and Cultural Strategist)
"From Cultural Diplomacy to Cultoral Ecoplomacy: Performing Resilience In Times Of Socio-Political Upheaval"
The Artistic Cultural Diplomacy Forum 2017
“Building Cultural Bridges through Art, Film and Music "


Kis Keya (YouTube - Bel'Afrika TV BAM-TV Kodjo Degbey
KIS KEYA présente son film " Deux filles "



Judy Kibinge (YouTube SmartMonkeyTV)
Judy Kibinge, Docubox talks about: being the region's first documentary film fund; opening a mini-hub for film-makers; and three interesting documentaries Docubox funded.




27 February 2016

Iman Kamel talks about her beloved home Egypt, storytelling through cinema and her film project Jeanne d'Arc Masriya

Iman Kamel
Iman Kamel, Egyptian filmmaker based in Germany, talks about her relationship to Egypt, her positionality between cultures, the use of cinema as a medium of storytelling, and her film project Jeanne d'Arc Masriya ("JDM")

Iman, talk a bit about yourself, your trajectory into documentary practice, your experience as an Egyptian living and working between cultures.

To talk about oneself one has to meditate about almost half of a life lived between cities, between cultures, between minds and ideologies. In fact I became a filmmaker by accident. Brought up in an artist’s household becoming a visual artist was a natural born thing. But then studying visual arts at the Academy of Arts in Berlin I found out that sitting in a studio and making art was not my thing. The director of the film academy of Berlin who was at the same time professor at our arts academy attended a presentation of my work. Then he came over to me and said, “everything you do has something to do with film, so come and make your first short film.” I did and my career as a filmmaker started from there. Actually I do not consider myself as a documentary filmmaker per se. I am more like a storyteller using the capacities of cinema to tell untold stories. Living and working in between cultures makes me sensitive to in-between stories, mostly subtle and introverted stories that are not crying out, it is the everyday life of my protagonists that interest me most, looking at the beauty and the lyrical in their universe.

While living outside of Egypt, issues and experiences regarding the country are your point of reference in terms of the stories you want to tell. Some reflections…

Actually my connection to my beloved home is so inherent in my system that it is actually not possible to live outside of Egypt for too long without suffering too much. There was an encounter with schoolmates in a reunion, and I listened to one of my schoolmates telling me, it has been seven years that she hasn’t been in Egypt. She would come together with her family in Zurich or London but not back home in Egypt. The longest time I really have been away from Egypt was two years and I got literally homesick, physically. I have to be home at least once a year. My artery of life is working on a movie, so I could connect to my protagonists, to their everyday struggles, to be emotionally connected I mean, to the smells, to the sounds, to the colours and to the agonies of my people. 

Your film Jeanne d'Arc Masriya ("JDM") is described as a creative documentary. Talk about your process, your choices in telling the story, especially how you connect to the story, on your return to Egypt.

The film industry always struggles to put my movies into a marketing box, so the easiest way to do it is to label it as a creative documentary. Me personally I do not distinguish between documentaries and fiction. For me cinema is cinema, the film language cannot and shall not confide itself to a funding category. I do get moved by very authentic moments in front of the camera; but I always love to apply these documentary-like moments into a playful—even fictional—storytelling, just to delve into deeper and multiple levels of a theme or a story. I do believe every scene caught on camera and edited later on film is going through a fictional process of abstraction. You have to put these scenes into a framework of a storyline. The protagonists are—whether aware of the camera or not—moving in front of the camera, so they move differently, etc. I do connect to my protagonists in an organic way. I listen; I observe; I feel; I am inspired. And then during the shooting, that is very much like a fictional shooting, has a beginning and an end, I try to capture these authentic moments that I create together with my protagonists. To work on an overall story as main line of action becomes then the challenge. So the dramaturgy, the editing, the voice over and music are essential in this process. These processes feed into each other to create a “whole” body of work. 

It is very different from classical documentary shooting, where you follow your protagonist maybe for years, where you have hundreds of hours of footages, and then you try to compile a film out of these materials. For me to have twenty hours of material shot at different times during the process of the film will suffice totally to create the foundation for my movies. I then study every image and motion in these footages; and it becomes for me the material like a poet works on his poems. The documentary transforms then to cinema as a universal poetic language.

In what way is Jehanne who dreams of being a dancer and disappears in Tahir Square on 9 March 2011 during the revolution while detained by military forces, a Jeanne d’Arc figure, an apparent reference to Jeanne d’Arc, a heroine of France?

I am aware that the reference to the French heroine will generate a lot of questioning. It started already in the pre-screenings we had. Actually there is a wealth of associations and meanings to this title and to the connection to this French figure who left her people in a village, made her way to the king and pursued her vision until the very bitter end. There is an inherent force in her story that stays with me forever. Every time when I am exhausted of moving against the stream, I always think of this young Jeanne d’Arc and get the power to move on despite of all obstacles. Also the title of Jeanne d’Arc refers to a movement of the revolution in Egypt itself that started in a dynamic of euphoria and infinite possibilities to get betrayed in the end even eliminated from history. 

Jeanne d'Arc Masriya explores issues related to female emancipation and the right to female expression in ‘post’ post-revolutionary Egypt, through your eyes as an Egyptian woman living in the diaspora. What was your experience in telling this story from your subject position?

When I embarked on the journey to rebel and question the codex of my society, that did not allow me the simplest things like living on my own in a flat or making love to a man before marriage, it seemed an impossible task to go against the current. Now I feel the clogs of fear were broken and as many women now seek their intrepid path for these kind of emancipations, struggling with feelings of shame, struggling to find their own ways beyond the westernized or even conventionalized ways of emancipation without loosing their precious roots.

In your search for Jehanne, talk about the choices/selection of voices of those who knew Jehanne.

These voices as I said entered the movie in an organic way. I would meet women and tell them about Jehanne and they would say, ah yes I met her on the streets as a demonstration companion, or ah I shared with her my first discoveries of body and dance at that course, etc. So it is a dialectical process. I created Jehanne out of the stories that I heard from women, but I also related Jehanne to many of the women in my film. It is a very fine line between reality and imagination that we walk in this movie. 

There is a written text in the film, apparently in reference to Jehanne’s desire to be a dancer:

Dance, when you’re broken open.
Dance if you’ve torn the bandage off.
Dance in the middle of the fighting.
Dance in your blood.
Dance, when you’re perfectly free.

Rum, 14th century.

...some reflections…

Rumi has expressed the core of my movie in this poem. I would experience for so many years now following my protagonists the way they express their kind of resistance in the midst of turmoil. They would wake up every morning and there is a friend who disappeared, or got arrested or had to flee the country, they would then go to their studio and keep working, they would never give up in their own way, no matter how much it breaks them, or eats them up from the inside. That kind of “inner” and “subtle” and I would say “spiritual” resistance is the blood for this movie.

Interview with Iman Kamel by Beti Ellerson, February 2016.


Also see other African Women in Cinema Blog article:


25 February 2011

Iman Kamel: Beit Sha'ar (Nomad's Home)

FESPACO 2011 WATCH: Official Competition: Documentary

Iman Kamel had this to say when I asked her about her experience making the film Beit Sha'ar

The film took almost five years to make. It had to do with the fact, that Sinai, where the Bedouins have settled, is a military area and filming is strictly prohibited. So when we finally decided to do the filming I went with a small camera, only with my camera women and worked on a very small scale. But when we arrived, we were confronted with the taboo of filming the Bedouin women. Although Selema my main protagonist agreed on the filming process, there was a lot of anxiety about our filming from the women around her, and we had to be very patient. The women and girls told me their stories but we did not film them.  And step by step, the veils fell. But filming was a very sensitive process, where my own story in the mirror of the encounter with Selema the Bedouin became increasingly clear. It is very evident that my story is also part of this film.

DIRECTOR’S STATEMENT
“So I sat on the sand and started to knit, and there is sand coming into it, and the warmth of the sun. I felt I am making a pullover, not from the wool alone, but from the whole Sinai. My sufi-wool house on my body, the whole desert Sinai in my house.” Iman Kamel

With the film Beit Sha’ar | Nomad’s Home, I pay homage to the Bedouin women of the Sinai Peninsula – many of whom I have come to know personally over the last twenty-five years. Though Bedouin society is very welcoming and protective to those in its circle, it does not easily assimilate strangers into its midst. Due to a long history of harassment by the Egyptian government and prejudice of the Egyptian people against them, Bedouins mistrust the Egyptian authorities and people. When I first became acquainted with the Bedouin as an Egyptian woman, I was enchanted by how much they welcomed me, allowing me to take an active part in their lives; and thus an enriching exchange between my life and their lives began. This long-lasting conversation became most profound with the tribeswoman Selema Gabaly and it is the contemplation of this interaction with Selema that forms the basis of the film.

As her family name indicates, Selema Gabaly was born in the mountains (‘Gabal’) of the Sinai Peninsula in Egypt. She was the first woman in her tribe to break with tradition by finishing her school education and then starting to work by managing a handicraft project involving almost every woman in her tribe, the Al Gabalya. These facts alone make her a pioneer for the rights of the Bedouin women in Sinai – rights she has had to fight for and defend almost her entire life since she was a young girl.

But I am not a Bedouin. I was born in the city of Cairo. I am an Egyptian filmmaker from a family of artists. A non-conformist character who left Cairo as a young woman seeking new horizons. Though I am now living in Berlin I am also content to call everywhere that I go ‘home’.

Connecting with Selema was an inevitability for me. Since the age of sixteen I had been visiting Sinai, and considered it to be my home in Egypt, far away from the chaotic city. When I first met Selema there in 2004 she was 32 years old. After that initial contact 5 years ago, I kept visiting her throughout the years - magnetized by her powerful character. As a result, a trustful friendship built itself up between us and she let me accompany her to her family house and on her tours to the Bedouin settlements in the region – places that are normally completely closed-off to outsiders.

In 2008, when I subsequently came to Sinai with my camerawoman to document Selema’s extraordinary life, her life had been again transformed: She had married a rural Egyptian man - outside of her own Bedouin community - and was in the process of defending her decision to marry in such a manner and to not be excluded from her community by breaking this taboo. At the time, her uncles and the patriarchs of the tribe were not accepting for her to marry outside of the tribe. They felt there was the danger of their families mating with an Egyptian; and they considered him as the “enemy”. Because of this, Selema was experiencing a lot of rejection from the other families and her handicraft project was at risk of falling apart…

But the bond built up over these years between all the women who had been working with Selema was stronger than the disgrace of the broken taboos, and soon the women began to stand behind Selema’s marriage and supported her work.

BEIT SHA’AR | NOMAD’S HOME is the story of how I met Selema; a document of the Bedouin women of her tribe and a poetic contemplation of how two women living totally different lives far apart can maintain a spiritual bond. Through this film I have come to discover that Selema and I share a lot in common. We are bound by one passion: that of being a nomad in today’s modern life, seeking to journey towards the unknown – yearning to be enriched by new discoveries.

Images Credit - Ute Freund




Blog Archive