Palestine, France / 2009 / 105 min
Director:Elia SULEIMAN
SULEIMAN’s semi-autobiographical film which portrays the Israeli-Palestinian conflict across time through his father who was a member of the Palestinian resistance force during the founding of Israel in 1948, his mother who was forced live separately because of that fact, and SULEIMAN himself who visits his home town Nazareth. Screened at Cannes International Film Festival.
Born in Nazareth on July 28, 1960, Elia SULEIMAN lived in New York between 1981 and 1993. During this period, he directed his two first short films, Introduction to the “End of an Argument” and “Homage by Assassination”, which won him numerous prizes. In 1994, he moved to Jerusalem where the European Commission charged him with establishing a Cinema and Media department at Birzeit University. His feature debut, “Chronicle of a Disappearance”, won the Best First Film award at the 1996 Venice Film Festival. In 2002, “Divine Intervention” won the Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival and the Best Foreign Film prize at the European Awards in Rome. His feature, “The Time That Remains”, screened In Competition at the 2009 Cannes film Festival. In 2012, Elia Suleiman directed the short film “Diary of a Beginner”, part of the portmanteau feature “7 Days in Havana”, which screened that year in Un Certain Regard at the Cannes Film Festival.
- TOKYO FILMeX Competition
-
Special Screenings
- index
- Love Mooning Opening film
- It Must Be Heaven Closing film
- Crash
- Denise Ho: Becoming the Song
- Laila in Haifa
- Irradiated
- Days
- Septet: The Story of Hong Kong
- Swimming Out Till The Sea Turns Blue
- The Calming
- The Woman Who Ran
- MINAMATA Mandala
- The Work and Days (of Tayoko Shiojiri in the Shiotani Basin)
- Filmmaker in Focus: Elia SULEIMAN
- Jury / Awards
- Entry Form / Regulations
- Talents Tokyo