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[ Wednesday, 05 December 2007 ]
 

Saudi Arabia new entrant among 55 submissions

Baghdad hosts film fest despite difficulties

Projection room at Baghdad's nat'l theatre (File)
Projection room at Baghdad's nat'l theatre (File)

BAGHDAD (AFP)

Preparations are underway for this month's Baghdad International Film Festival, the first major cinematic event in the war-ravaged capital in more than two years.

Around 55 films from across the Arab world, Europe and Asia have been submitted for screening at the festival, which will be held December 26-29, organizer Ammar al-Arradi told AFP.

Countries which have sent in contributions include Egypt, the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia for the first time, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, Morocco, France, Denmark, Belgium, Singapore and the Philippines.

A committee will select the final line-up for the festival on the basis of "audience tastes, technical competence and humanitarian themes," said Arradi, head of the Association of Iraqi Filmmakers Without Borders which is organizing the event.

"Some of the films were screened in previous film festivals and won awards," Arradi said, declining to elaborate.

"Films will be showed from 9 am (0600 GMT) to 4 pm with one hour of rest," he added. "It's all that the security situation will allow at the moment."

The last movie festival in Baghdad was held in 2005, when 58 locally made short films were screened in crowded halls.

Since February 2006, however, when a Shiite shrine was bombed in the city of Samarra, Baghdad -- like most of Iraq -- has been in the grip of bitter sectarian warfare which has killed thousands of Iraqis.

Entertainment, along with most other leisure pursuits, has come almost to a standstill with the vast majority of movie houses in Baghdad, once crammed with film-lovers, standing empty.

Iraq's film industry dates back to the 1940s and was at its most popular in the 70s and 80s, when cinema-going became a weekly family outing. The 1991 Gulf war and the economic sanctions that followed it, however, saw theatres going into decline.

The turmoil sparked by the 2003 invasion saw cinemas burned and attacked, with only a few now still keeping their doors open for an ever-dwindling audience.

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