The Prague Post - Saudia Arabia's growing cinema soft power

EUR -
AED 4.195716
AFN 72.560073
ALL 94.31769
AMD 420.508381
ANG 2.04548
AOA 1047.644123
ARS 1669.694703
AUD 1.640583
AWG 2.056444
AZN 1.937366
BAM 1.951153
BBD 2.306843
BDT 140.40559
BGN 1.931778
BHD 0.431903
BIF 3415.564357
BMD 1.142469
BND 1.481249
BOB 7.897191
BRL 5.87731
BSD 1.145318
BTN 108.141435
BWP 15.544176
BYN 3.20464
BYR 22392.391132
BZD 2.303543
CAD 1.619484
CDF 2587.691975
CHF 0.924126
CLF 0.026309
CLP 1035.430692
CNY 7.74
CNH 7.751046
COP 3930.241658
CRC 519.576724
CUC 1.142469
CUP 30.275427
CVE 110.676686
CZK 24.199665
DJF 203.959823
DKK 7.473763
DOP 66.954114
DZD 152.580194
EGP 56.951505
ERN 17.137034
ETB 181.823948
FJD 2.562386
FKP 0.863358
GBP 0.86289
GEL 3.02188
GGP 0.863358
GHS 12.829763
GIP 0.863358
GMD 83.400062
GNF 10035.487198
GTQ 8.715243
GYD 239.090548
HKD 8.956579
HNL 30.469874
HRK 7.536757
HTG 149.61843
HUF 352.716709
IDR 20403.92395
ILS 3.414366
IMP 0.863358
INR 108.154622
IQD 1496.634305
IRR 1570894.786447
ISK 143.996665
JEP 0.863358
JMD 180.977061
JOD 0.809995
JPY 184.690956
KES 147.846575
KGS 99.908709
KHR 4584.153604
KMF 492.404054
KPW 1028.222442
KRW 1757.077202
KWD 0.35268
KYD 0.954469
KZT 558.245106
LAK 25191.440059
LBP 102308.092812
LKR 382.977458
LRD 208.158819
LSL 18.818935
LTL 3.373413
LVL 0.691068
LYD 7.343193
MAD 10.681964
MDL 20.141221
MGA 4832.643826
MKD 61.641147
MMK 2399.091052
MNT 4089.160993
MOP 9.248525
MRU 45.778737
MUR 54.792826
MVR 17.662892
MWK 1986.02879
MXN 19.883781
MYR 4.728903
MZN 73.004151
NAD 18.818853
NGN 1563.330948
NIO 41.848381
NOK 11.114282
NPR 173.393066
NZD 2.006635
OMR 0.439287
PAB 1.142878
PEN 3.867293
PGK 4.985449
PHP 70.036782
PKR 317.778152
PLN 4.276432
PYG 6982.282253
QAR 4.165475
RON 5.239019
RSD 117.346425
RUB 84.82358
RWF 1673.145756
SAR 4.288476
SBD 9.214058
SCR 16.916058
SDG 686.056203
SEK 11.012692
SGD 1.478686
SHP 0.852968
SLE 28.276016
SLL 23957.006526
SOS 654.544701
SRD 42.763184
STD 23646.800326
STN 24.677329
SVC 10.021578
SYP 126.279488
SZL 18.747772
THB 37.912263
TJS 10.600552
TMT 4.010066
TND 3.326293
TOP 2.750791
TRY 53.101044
TTD 7.767089
TWD 36.176618
TZS 3000.674049
UAH 51.511978
UGX 4172.063228
USD 1.142469
UYU 45.701152
UZS 13703.915009
VES 704.749414
VND 30066.926205
VUV 135.21383
WST 3.143842
XAF 655.801403
XAG 0.018316
XAU 0.000277
XCD 3.087579
XCG 2.064201
XDR 0.815603
XOF 655.795664
XPF 119.331742
YER 272.650552
ZAR 18.790872
ZMK 10283.589209
ZMW 20.301094
ZWL 367.874531
  • CMSC

    -0.2100

    22.16

    -0.95%

  • VOD

    -0.1800

    14.12

    -1.27%

  • RBGPF

    -0.2700

    60.34

    -0.45%

  • NGG

    1.5300

    80.97

    +1.89%

  • RELX

    -0.3500

    30.83

    -1.14%

  • RYCEF

    0.2300

    18.63

    +1.23%

  • RIO

    -0.7200

    99.36

    -0.72%

  • GSK

    0.0700

    50.74

    +0.14%

  • CMSD

    -0.2100

    22.08

    -0.95%

  • AZN

    1.5000

    176.43

    +0.85%

  • BCE

    -0.6300

    22.65

    -2.78%

  • BCC

    -2.1200

    72.54

    -2.92%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    12.65

    -0.16%

  • BP

    0.6800

    39.78

    +1.71%

  • BTI

    -0.0100

    58.9

    -0.02%

Saudia Arabia's growing cinema soft power
Saudia Arabia's growing cinema soft power / Photo: Valery HACHE - AFP

Saudia Arabia's growing cinema soft power

Accompanying Naomi Campbell on the red carpet at the Cannes Film Festival last week was one of cinema's most powerful men -- and he represents a country where cinemas were banned until five years ago.

Text size:

Mohammed Al Turki, 36, heads Saudi Arabia's Red Sea Film Foundation, his name splashed all over posters and movie credits at the world's biggest cinema gathering on the French Riviera.

The foundation, formed two years ago, holds its own annual festival and has already financed 168 movies, including eight in the official selection at Cannes this year.

Among them was festival opener "Jeanne du Barry" about a French prostitute falling in love with King Louis XV, played by Johnny Depp.

Others seemed equally at odds with traditional Saudi values -- female-focused films such as "Four Daughters" about the religious radicalisation of Tunisian girls, or "Goodbye Julia" about a Sudanese woman and her overbearing conservative husband.

"We have learned to respect other cultures," Emad Iskandar, director of the Red Sea Film Foundation, told AFP.

He said the foundation focuses on Arab and African filmmakers, though the precise definition seems flexible: the French director of "Jeanne du Barry", Maiwenn, qualified thanks to her Algerian father.

"As long as we have the resources, we want to serve the region, but also take the opportunity to learn more," Iskandar added.

Al Turki's foundation also sponsored a gala for women, attended by Catherine Deneuve, Katie Holmes and supermodel Campbell.

"MO!! Proud of all your doing @redseafilm creating history of many 1st's and Changing the narrative," Campbell wrote of Al Turki on her Instagram.

- Whitewashing? -

Saudi largesse for the arts has boomed under the kingdom's de facto ruler, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, with billions pouring into previously taboo areas such as music, fashion and sports.

Human Rights Watch says this is designed to "whitewash its dismal rights record" and that, despite recent reforms, Saudi Arabia continues to repress civil society, execute dissidents, discriminate against women and bury the investigation into the 2018 murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

But most Saudis back the reforms, and its officials say it is absurd to expect the kingdom to turn into a liberal paradise overnight.

Accusations of whitewashing "sadden us more than anything else," said Iskander.

"Come to visit and get to know Saudi Arabia and then talk about us. The West has arrived where it is after years of wars and debates. We are a 90-year-old state -- be patient."

In any case, the relentless PR campaign is working. The Saudi presence at Cannes felt less controversial than that of Depp, still widely branded as toxic since his court battle with ex-wife Amber Heard.

Cannes director Thierry Fremaux celebrated the kingdom's interest in "producing films and allowing artists to emerge".

"Saudi Arabia is evolving," he told Variety.

- 'More and more present' -

All over Cannes were adverts calling on producers and directors to shoot in Saudi Arabia, while its pavilion showed off the work of its own young directors.

"Every year Saudi Arabia asks for a bigger pavilion, more facilities, to be more and more present," said Guillaume Esmiol, head of the Cannes Film Market that runs alongside the festival.

Saudi Arabia is not the only country in the region investing massively in cinema: rival Qatar financed 13 films at Cannes this year, including three in the main competition.

Some have little or no connection to the Middle East.

"We have a lot of French productions," Fatma Hassan Alremaihi, Doha Film Institute CEO, told AFP.

"We don't want to be insular, we want our filmmakers to be open to other regions and other filmmakers and work with them."

She had no qualms that such investments were aimed at spreading Qatar's soft power.

"Who doesn't do that? The US does that with their Hollywood films... At least we are doing what we believe in, and we are not losing our identity at the same time."

R.Rous--TPP