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Showing posts with label Mounia Meddour. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mounia Meddour. Show all posts

03 February 2023

Mounia Meddour: Houria - Continent AFRIQUE 2023 - Africiné Magazine

Mounia Meddour: Houria - Continent AFRIQUE 2023

http://africine.org/evenement/continent-afrique-2023-pau/50595


Mounia Meddour

Houria

France/Belgique/Algérie - 98min - Fiction -2022


“There is this desire to continue to probe this territory, this Algerian world, this Algerian heritage. To continue to talk about Algerian women, the Algerian women of today, who are a bit engulfed in the present socio-economique problems. So for me there is an obvious continuity after Papicha, to continue working with these magnificant actresses—the same team, the same actresses in Papicha—in order to recount this second story which is very important for me. There is a personage in Houria who, on this terrace, begins alone in a classical dance and who ends in a group with a impressive collective of women.”


“Il y a cette envie de continuer à creuser ce territoire qui est le territoire algérien, le territoire du patrimoine algérien, continuer à raconter les femmes algériennes, les femmes algériennes actuelles, finalement un tout petit peu noyées dans les problèmes socio-économiques actuels et donc pour moi il y a une évidence, c’est évidente une continuité après Papicha, de continuer ce travail avec ces magnifiques comédiennes. Aussi puisqu’on a repris vraiment la même équipe technique et les mêmes comédiennes que Papicha pour raconter cette deuxième histoire qui pour moi est très importante. On a un personnage dans Houria qui démarre seul une danse classique sur cette terrasse et qui finit finalement en groupe avec un collectif impressionnant de femmes.”

(Rencontre avec Mounia Meddour et Nadia Kaci pour Houria présenté à l'Arras Film Festival 2022)



Synopsis

Set in Alger. Houria, a young and talented dancer, is a housekeeper by day, at night she participates in clandestine ventures. But one night when she is violently attacked, she is hospitalized. Her dreams of becoming a ballerina are shattered. She must now accept and love her new body. With the support of her entourage of women like her, she finds meaning in her life by inscribing dance in the reconstruction and sublimation of wounded bodies.


Alger. Houria est une jeune et talentueuse danseuse . Femme de ménage le jour, elle participe à des paris clandestins la nuit . Mais un soir où elle a gagné gros, elle est violemment agressée par Ali et se retrouve à l’hôpital. Ses rêves de carrière de ballerine s’envolent. Elle doit alors accepter et aimer son nouveau corps. Entourée d’une communauté de femmes, Houria va retrouver un sens à sa vie en inscrivant la danse dans la reconstruction et sublimation des corps blessés…


Bio


Born in Moscow, Mounia Meddour grew up in Algeria, then in France where she studied journalism and then cinema. After several documentaries: Particules élémentaires (2007), La Cuisine en héritage (2009) et Cinéma algérien, un nouveau souffle (2011), she directed her first short fiction, Edwidge (2011), awarded a special mention at the Journées cinématographiques d’Alger. In 2019, she created a sensation with her first feature, Papicha, presented in the Official Selection of the Cannes Festival in 2019 in the Un Certain Regard. Acclaimed by the critics, the film was awarded the César of the best first film with the Most Promising Actress for Lyna Khoudri in 2020. Papicha was also nominated to represent Algeria at the Oscars. 


Née à Moscou, Mounia Meddour grandit en Algérie puis en France où elle effectue des études supérieures de journalisme puis se forme au cinéma. Après plusieurs documentaires Particules élémentaires (2007), La Cuisine en héritage (2009) et Cinéma algérien, un nouveau souffle (2011), elle réalise son premier court métrage de fiction, Edwige (2011), qui reçoit une mention spéciale aux Journées cinématographiques d’Alger. En 2019, elle crée l’événement avec son premier long métrage Papicha, présenté en Sélection officielle du Festival de Cannes 2019 dans la section Un Certain Regard. Acclamé par la critique, le film reçoit en 2020 le César du meilleur premier film et celui du meilleur espoir féminin pour Lyna Khoudri. Papicha a participé également à la course aux Oscars où le film représente l’Algérie. (festival-cannes.com)



30 January 2020

Cascade Festival of African Films 2020: "Papicha" by Mounia Meddour (Algeria)

Cascade Festival of African Films 2020
Papicha by Mounia Meddour
(Algeria) 2019, 106 min
Featuring Women Filmmakers Week

Synopsis
Nedjma (Lyna Khoudri) is a young Algerian student living on a university campus. In the early 1990s, Algeria saw the first hours of a civil war between the state and Islamic terrorists. The "dark decade", as it will be called later, left thousands of Algerian families in bereavement. But festivities are still going on at the start of Papicha, the first feature film by the Algerian director. With her friend Wassila (Shirine Boutella), they have quietly left the city to party and to sell the creations of Nedjma, a budding stylist, to the "papichas", the nickname for "pretty young Algerian girls". It is still the time of insouciance. (Source: Falila Gbadamassi, Africine.org 

Bio
Born in Algeria, Mounia Meddour moved to France with her family at age 18. She studied journalism and audiovisual production in France, at both the CEFP and Femis. She directed her first documentary Particules élémentaires  in 2007 and in 2009, La Cuisine en héritage. In 2011, she made her first short fiction film Edwige.

30th Annual Cascade Festival of African Films 2020: Featuring Women Filmmakers Week

30th Annual Cascade Festival of African Films

In Celebration of Black History Month
At Portland Community College
31 January to 29 February 2020

The Cascade Festival of African Films is held in Portland, Oregon USA. The closing week of the festival features Women Filmmakers Week, which includes retrospectives, tributes and recently released short and feature films:

The Cascade Festival of African Films shows us Africa through the eyes of Africans, rather than a vision of Africa packaged for Western viewers. The films celebrate Africa’s achievements, expose its failures, and reveal possibilities for a hopeful future. Although the films cannot represent an entire continent, we hope to encourage American viewers to become interested in and study African cultures. Text and image source: Cascade Festival of African Films

The 2020 lineup of films for Women Filmmakers Week 27-29 February 

Papicha by Mounia Meddour (Algeria) 2019, 106 min (Women Filmmakers Week)
Life is Fare by Sephora Woldu (Eritrea, USA) 2018, 61 min
Freedom Fields by Naziha Arebi (Libya), 2018, 97 min
Woven by Salome Mulugeta and Nagwa Ibrahim (Ethiopia USA) 2016

Also women-directed films in the 30th Cascade Film Festival selection:
Adam by Maryam Touzani (Morocco) 2019, 98 min
The Shadow of Cairo by Tara Shehata (Egypt) 2018, 15 min (Family Fest Matinee) 
Sela by Rafieka Davis (South Africa) 2019, 25 min (Family Fest Matinee)

Theatre
How to Have Fun in a Civil War (Live Theater Performance)
A one-woman show by Somali multimedia artist Ifrah Mansour, USA 2018, 55 min

2020 Films - 01-29 February (Festival website link to films
  • Adam by Maryam Touzani (Morocco) 2019, 98 min
  • Alyam, Alyam/Oh The Days by Ahmed El Maanouni (Morocco) 1978, 98 min
  • (African Film Heritage Series)
  • Boxing Libreville by Amedée Pacôme Nkoulou (Gabon) 2018, 54 min (Documentary Series)
  • Everything Must Fall by Rehad Desai (South Africa) 2018, 85 min (Documentary Series)
  • Family Fest Matinee with The Shadow of Cairo by Tara Shehata and Sela by Rafieka Davis 
  • Fatwa by Mahmoud Ben Mahmoud (Tunisia) 2018, 102 min
  • Freedom Fields by Naziha Arebi (Libya), 2018, 97 min
  • (Women Filmmakers Week)
  • Gao, Resistance of a People by Kassim Sanogo (Mali) 2018, 54 min (Documentary Series)
  • How to Have Fun in a Civil War, a one-woman show by Ifrah Monsour (Somalia, USA) 2018, 55 min (Live Theatre Performance)
  • Ishaba by Yuhi Amuli (Rwanda) 2015, 4 min (Short film)
  • La femme au couteau/The Woman with the Knife by Timité Bassori (Côte d'Ivoire) 1969, 80 min (African Film Heritage Series)
  • Life is Fare by Sephora Woldu (Eritrea, USA), 2018, 61 min (Women Filmmakers Week)
  • Mabata Bata by Sol de Carvalho (Mozambique) 2018, 74 min
  • Munda Moto/The Child of Another by Jean-Pierre Dikongué-Pipa (Cameroon) 1975, 90 min (African Film Heritage Series)
  • Nigerian Prince by Faraday Okoro (Nigeria, USA) 2018, 104 min
  • Papicha by Mounia Meddour (Algeria) 2019, 106 min (Women Filmmakers Week)
  • Photocopy by Tamer Ashry (Egypt) 2017, 90 min
  • Soleil O by Med Hondo (Mauritania, France) 1970, 105 min (African Film Heritage Series)
  • Spotlight on Senegal: Short Film Series
  • Talk about Trees by Suhaib Gasmelbari (Sudan) 2019, 90 min
  • The Burial of Kojo by Blitz Bazawule (Ghana) 2018, 80 min
  • The Mercy of the Jungle by Joël Karekezi (Rwanda) 2018, 91 min
  • Woven by Salome Mulugeta and Nagwa Ibrahim (Ethiopia USA) 2016 (Women Filmmakers Week)
  • Zombies by Baloji (Democratic Republic of the Congo) 2019, 13 min (Short)



20 May 2019

"Papicha: Mounia Meddour in resistance mode" | "Papicha : Mounia Meddour en mode résistance" analysis/analyse by/par Falila Gbadamassi (Africine)

"Papicha: Mounia Meddour in resistance mode" "Papicha : Mounia Meddour en mode résistance" analysis/analyse by/par Falila Gbadamassi (Africine)

In collaboration with Africine.org, translated from French by Beti Ellerson and published on the African Women in Cinema Blog.

05/18/2019

To resist with needle in hand. This is the pulsating exposé that the filmmaker Mounia Meddour delivers in Papicha, the film representing Algeria at Un Certain Regard at the Cannes Film Festival.

Nedjma (Lyna Khoudri) is a young Algerian student living on a university campus. In the early 1990s, Algeria saw the first hours of a civil war between the state and Islamic terrorists. The "dark decade", as it will be called later, left thousands of Algerian families in bereavement. But festivities are still going on at the start of Papicha, the first feature film by the Algerian director. With her friend Wassila (Shirine Boutella), they have quietly left the city to party and to sell the creations of Nedjma, a budding stylist, to the "papichas", the nickname for "pretty young Algerian girls". It is still the time of insouciance.

The police roadblocks and the posters pasted on the walls of the university buildings which demand that women wear the veil, nonetheless suggest that this époque will soon see its epilogue. The filmmaker alternates the scenes of a seemingly immutable day-to-day life with those indicating that because of the violence, the world of Nedjma and that of all Algerians is falling apart.

The student and her friend have the same problems as all the young women in the world. However, finding solutions is increasingly complex in a society that is becoming more and more conservative. This noxious atmosphere is a source of trauma for Nedjma, especially when tragedy arrives at her door. She then takes refuge in sewing. The needle and haik, a large fabric that Algerian women use to cover their bodies, will now be their weapons to challenge those who restrict women's rights on a daily basis. The show she intends to organise is conceived of as a political demonstration against all those extremists who want to put her and her fellow comrades in their place.

Nedjma's character is a figure of resistance like those Algerian women who hid in their famous haik, their weapons against French settlers during the war of independence. The use of this cloth brings about one of the most beautiful scenes of the film when Nedjma's mother explains it to her daughters. Mounia Meddour, inspired by the pain of exile imposed on her family by the dark decade, delivers a story to the glory of all the young girls, women and feminists who have stood up, who stand up and who rise in Algeria in order to preserve and guarantee their legitimate right to self-determination.

Papicha : Mounia Meddour en mode résistance 

Résister l'aiguille à la main. C'est la vibrante démonstration que livre la cinéaste Mounia Meddour dans Papicha, film représentant l'Algérie à Un Certain Regard au Festival de Cannes.

Nedjma (Lyna Khoudri) est une jeune étudiante algéroise qui réside en cité universitaire. Au début des années 90, l'Algérie vit les premières heures d'une guerre civile qui oppose l'Etat aux terroristes islamistes. La décennie noire, comme on l'appellera plus tard, endeuillera des milliers de familles algériennes. Mais l'heure est encore à la fête quand démarre Papicha, le premier long métrage de fiction de la réalisatrice algérienne. Avec son amie Wassila (Shirine Boutella), elles ont encore quitté la cité en douce pour aller faire la fête et vendre les créations de Nedjma, styliste en herbe, aux "papichas", surnom des "jolies jeunes filles algéroises". C'est encore le temps de l'insouciance. Lire l'intégralité de l'article @ http://www.africine.org/?menu=art&no=14682

13 May 2019

Cannes 2019 : African Women at Cannes | La présence africaine au féminin

Cannes 2019 :
African Women at Cannes
La présence africaine au féminin


Jury Longs-metrages | Features
Maïmouna N’Diaye: Franco-guinéenne actrice et réalisatrice | French-Guinean actress and filmmaker
https://www.festival-cannes.com/fr/festival/artiste/maimouna-n-diaye

Jury Caméra d'Or
Alice Diop: Franco-sénégalaise réalisatrice |
Franco-Senegalese filmmaker
https://www.festival-cannes.com/fr/festival/artiste/alice-diop

Semaine de la critique
Djia Mambu: Belgo-congolaise journaliste et critic du cinéma | Belgian-Congolese journalist at film critic https://www.semainedelacritique.com/fr/jury


SELECTION OFFICIELLE | OFFICIAL SELECTION

Competition Longs-métrages | Features
Mati Diop (France|Senegal) Atlantique, 2019. 104 min.
https://www.festival-cannes.com/fr/festival/films/atlantique

Un certain regard
Mounia Meddour (Algérie|Algeria) Papicha, 2019. 106 min.
https://www.festival-cannes.com/fr/festival/films/papicha

Monia Chokri (Canada-Tunisia) La Femme de mon frère, 2019. 117 min
https://www.festival-cannes.com/fr/festival/films/la-femme-de-mon-frere 

Maryam Touzani (Maroc|Morocco) Adam, 2019. 98 min.
https://www.festival-cannes.com/fr/festival/films/adam-1


SEMAINE DE LA CRITIQUE

Competition - Shorts | Courts métrages 
Nada Riyadh (Egypte) Fakh, 2019. 20 min.
https://www.semainedelacritique.com/fr/edition/2019/film/fakh

Comité de séléction | Selection Committee :
Clémentine Dramani-Issifou : Franco-Beninoise chercheuse et curatrice indépendante de films | French-Beninese researcher and independent film curator ) https://www.semainedelacritique.com/fr/comite-de-selection

Séance Spéciale - Longs métrages | Features
Hafsia Herzi (Tunisia-Algeria-France) Tu mérites un amour (You Deserve a Lover), 2019. 102 min.
https://www.semainedelacritique.com/fr/edition/2019/film/tu-merites-un-amour


LES CINEMAS DU MONDE: LA FABRIQUE

Kantarama Gahigiri is a Rwandan-Swiss filmmaker. Her first feature film Tapis Rouge has received awards worldwide, including TV5Monde Best Picture, followed by a theatrical release in France in May 2017. She is now developing Tanzanite, an Afrofuturistic thriller that takes place in colorful Nairobi, and she participated in Realness, an African screenwriters’ residency, with the film.


QUINZAINE DES REALISATEURS | DIRECTOR'S FORTNIGHT

Comité de séléction | Selection Committee :
Claire Diao : Franco-Burkinabé journaliste et critic du cinéma | French-Burkinabé journalist and film critic

***

IEFTA in partnership with the Marché du Film 
IEFTA en partenariat avec le Marché du film
Marwa ZeinSudanese director-producer, is among the seven young filmmakers attending the festival | La cinéaste-productrice soudanaise fait partie des sept jeunes cinéastes assistants au festival.

IEFTA (International Emerging Film Talent Association) once again partners with the renowned Marché du Film at the 72nd Cannes Film Festival to offer seven young filmmakers the opportunity to attend the festival, participate in career-changing Industry Workshops, develop their projects, build their networks and raise their ambitions.

L’IEFTA (International Emerging Film Talent Association) s'associe à nouveau au célèbre Marché du Film lors du 72ème Festival de Cannes pour offrir à sept jeunes réalisateurs la possibilité de assister au festival, de participer à des ateliers de réorientation professionnel, de développer leurs projets, de  construire leurs réseaux et réaliser leurs ambitions.
https://www.iefta.org/seven-filmmakers-to-attend-cannes-2019/

LINKS FROM THE AFRICAN WOMEN IN CINEMA BLOG:

Cannes 2019: Mati Diop receives/reçoit le Grand Prix
https://africanwomenincinema.blogspot.com/2019/05/cannes-2019-mati-diop-receivesrecoit-le.html

Cannes 2019: Maïmouna N'Diaye, member of the jury | membre du jury: interview/entretien by/par Falila Gbadamassi (AfriqueFrance Télévisions)
https://africanwomenincinema.blogspot.com/2019/05/cannes-2019-maimouna-ndiaye-member-of.html

Mati Diop: "It was very important for me to dedicate a film to this ghost generation" | "C'était très important pour moi de dédier un film à cette génération fantôme". Interview/Entretien by/par Falila Gbadamassi (Africine, Cannes 2019)
https://africanwomenincinema.blogspot.com/2019/05/mati-diop-it-was-very-important-for-me.html

"Papicha: Mounia Meddour in resistance mode" | "Papicha : Mounia Meddour en mode résistance" analysis/analyse by/par Falila Gbadamassi (Africine)
https://africanwomenincinema.blogspot.com/2019/05/papicha-mounia-meddour-in-resistance.html

Djia Mambu, journalist and film critic | journaliste et critique de cinéma (Cannes 2019)
https://africanwomenincinema.blogspot.com/2019/05/djia-mambu-journalist-and-film-critic.html

Cannes 2019: Maryam Touzani's "Adam" (Morocco)
https://africanwomenincinema.blogspot.com/2019/05/cannes-2019-maryam-touzanis-adam-morocco.html

Mati Diop’s "Atlantique" – In the foam of the "Atlantic” | Dans l'écume de l' "Atlantique" analysis/analyse by/par Falila Gbadamassi (Africine)
https://africanwomenincinema.blogspot.com/2019/05/mati-diops-atlantique-in-foam-of.html

Mati Diop : Atlantique (Cannes 2019)

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