Egyptian public, private sectors off on Apr 25 marking Sinai Liberation    Egypt's SCZONE welcomes Zhejiang Province delegation for trade talks    Beltone Venture Capital partners with Citadel International to manage $30m startup fund    S. Africa to use contingency reserves to tackle debt    Gaza health authorities urge action for cancer, chronic disease patients    Transport Minister discusses progress on supplying new railway carriages with Hungarian company    Egypt's local gold prices see minor rise on April 18th    Expired US license impacts Venezuela crude exports    Taiwan's TSMC profit ups in Q1    Yen Rises, dollar retreats as G7 eyes currency calm    Egypt, Bahrain vow joint action to end Gaza crisis    Egypt looks forward to mobilising sustainable finance for Africa's public health: Finance Minister    Egypt's Ministry of Health initiates 90 free medical convoys    Egypt, Serbia leaders vow to bolster ties, discuss Mideast, Ukraine crises    Singapore leads $5b initiative for Asian climate projects    Karim Gabr inaugurates 7th International Conference of BUE's Faculty of Media    EU pledges €3.5b for oceans, environment    Egypt forms supreme committee to revive historic Ahl Al-Bayt Trail    Debt swaps could unlock $100b for climate action    Acts of goodness: Transforming companies, people, communities    Eid in Egypt: A Journey through Time and Tradition    President Al-Sisi embarks on new term with pledge for prosperity, democratic evolution    Amal Al Ghad Magazine congratulates President Sisi on new office term    Tourism Minister inspects Grand Egyptian Museum, Giza Pyramids    Egypt's healthcare sector burgeoning with opportunities for investors – minister    Egypt starts construction of groundwater drinking water stations in South Sudan    Russians in Egypt vote in Presidential Election    Egyptian, Japanese Judo communities celebrate new coach at Tokyo's Embassy in Cairo    Uppingham Cairo and Rafa Nadal Academy Unite to Elevate Sports Education in Egypt with the Introduction of the "Rafa Nadal Tennis Program"    Egypt's powerhouse 'The Tank' Hamed Khallaf secures back-to-back gold at World Cup Weightlifting Championship"    Financial literacy becomes extremely important – EGX official    Euro area annual inflation up to 2.9% – Eurostat    Egypt builds 8 groundwater stations in S. Sudan    BYD، Brazil's Sigma Lithium JV likely    UNESCO celebrates World Arabic Language Day    Motaz Azaiza mural in Manchester tribute to Palestinian journalists    Russia says it's in sync with US, China, Pakistan on Taliban    It's a bit frustrating to draw at home: Real Madrid keeper after Villarreal game    Shoukry reviews with Guterres Egypt's efforts to achieve SDGs, promote human rights    Sudan says countries must cooperate on vaccines    Johnson & Johnson: Second shot boosts antibodies and protection against COVID-19    Egypt to tax bloggers, YouTubers    Egypt's FM asserts importance of stability in Libya, holding elections as scheduled    We mustn't lose touch: Muller after Bayern win in Bundesliga    Egypt records 36 new deaths from Covid-19, highest since mid June    Egypt sells $3 bln US-dollar dominated eurobonds    Gamal Hanafy's ceramic exhibition at Gezira Arts Centre is a must go    Italian Institute Director Davide Scalmani presents activities of the Cairo Institute for ITALIANA.IT platform    







Thank you for reporting!
This image will be automatically disabled when it gets reported by several people.



Remembering Youssef Chahine
Published in Al-Ahram Weekly on 29 - 11 - 2018

The Egyptian film director Youssef Chahine died 10 years ago in July 2008, and the Cinemathèque française, the French national film institute in Paris, has organised an exhibition on his life together with an unusually comprehensive retrospective of his films, made over an immense and more-than-50-year career.
The exhibition, running until July next year, draws on material deposited at the Cinemathèque by Chahine or his estate as part of the institution's archives. In the latter part of his career, Chahine had particularly close links to France, with the French producer Humbert Balsan helping to finance and distribute many of Chahine's best-known later films, including parts of his Alexandria trilogy of Iskandriya Leh?, Iskandriya Kaman wa Kaman, and Adieu Bonaparte, a recreation of French general Napoleon Bonaparte's expedition to Egypt, landing off Alexandria in 1798.
It begins with items bearing witness to the very earliest years of Chahine's career in the early 1950s, when the young director, just back from studying acting in California and enthralled by the golden age of Hollywood cinema, was making the first hesitant steps into film-directing, abandoning acting to those he thought better able to draw the crowds to a series of commercially pitched romantic films.
The young Michel Chalhoub, a school friend from Victoria College in Alexandria, was an early Chahine discovery, later achieving wider fame under the name of Omar Sharif. Another was the equally young Faten Hamama, playing opposite Sharif in Chahine's 1954 film Sira fil-Wadi (Blazing Sun), for example, as well as in a clutch of other early films.
Chahine's films from this early period, the first few made even before the July 1952 Revolution, were notable for their appeal to the mainstream audiences of the time, and he drew freely on the talent available in what was then a well-established private-sector film industry for a series of romantic comedies featuring sometimes stock characters and delicious song-and-dance routines.
In addition to Sharif and Hamama, various other luminaries of the time acted in these early films, including Hussein Riad, Farid Shawki and Hind Rostom in the first of them, the 1950 comedy Papa Amin, and they appealed to audiences eager for entertainment in Arabic that were perhaps tired of an earlier fare of mostly American films. It was only later that Chahine began to make more socially aware or political films, perhaps influenced by director Salah Abu Seif, one of his most important peers at the time.
Later still, Chahine's career took another turn with a series of films drawing on his own autobiography and largely set in Alexandria, before settling into an eclectic mix of historical films on philosophical or religious themes, often carrying with them a powerful message of tolerance, a return to the gorgeous spectacle of Hollywood musicals, notably in the 2004 film Iskandriya… New York, and films on social and political themes, such as his last film Al-Fouda (Chaos) made in 2007 and seeming to offer a diagnosis of contemporary social ills.
The exhibition, divided into overlapping chronological and thematic parts, has much to say about Chahine's early energy, producing a film a year and sometimes two in the period after 1950, and seeing this as culminating in two new and rather different films, Bab Al-Hadid (Cairo Station) and Djamila Bouhired (Jamila the Algerian), in 1958.
The first of these, sometimes described as an early masterpiece and an exercise in social realism that drew attention to segments of the population ignored in earlier films, saw Chahine himself return to acting as Qinawi, a newspaper seller at Cairo's main railway station who is drawn into a life of crime. The second is a portrait of the Algerian freedom-fighter Djamila Bouhired, who was condemned to death by the French colonial authorities in Algeria during the Algerian War of Independence in the 1950s, but was later released upon the country's independence in 1962.
According to the notes to the Paris exhibition, the Chahine of these early years, having proved his abilities with a series of entertainment films, was now in search of other styles and intellectually and politically more satisfying themes. “In search of a more meaningful form of film-making, Chahine turned towards neo-realism and his first film d'auteur with Bab Al-Hadid,” these comment, “marking a break with the superficiality of his entertainment films.”
“Then, Chahine discovered the cinema of commitment… and the decolonisation of the Third World” in the later 1950s in his portrait of Djamila Bouhired, as well as in his epic film about Saladin (Salaheddin), the Kurdish military commander and later Egyptian sultan who retook Jerusalem from the Crusaders in 1187 CE.
Saladin is implicitly compared to then Egyptian president Gamal Abdel-Nasser, a leader of Pan-Arabism and a major figure in the Non-Aligned Movement of Third World countries in the 1950s and 1960s, in Chahine's film Al-Nasser Salaheddin (1963).
Remembering Youssef Chahine
IN SEARCH OF AUTONOMY: The exhibition contains many fascinating artefacts from these years, lent either by the Chahine estate or in the Cinemathèque's Chahine archives, including scripts and publicity materials and the director's own working notes.
However, a new tone is struck after the success of Al-Nasser Salaheddin, funded by the now-nationalised film industry with the support of the political regime, when Chahine was asked to revise his film on the building of the Aswan High Dam, Al-Nil wal-Hayat (One Day, the Nile), since it did not carry the message wanted by its Soviet co-sponsors and was subsequently banned in Egypt and the former Soviet Union. A re-edited version more acceptable to both sides later appeared under the title Al-Nass wal-Nil (People of the Nile) in 1968.
“Suffocated by the conformism of Nasser's Egypt,” the notes to the exhibition say, Chahine left for Lebanon, where he made a musical, Biyaa Al-Khawatem (The Ring-Seller), with the Lebanese diva Fayrouz. On his return to Egypt after the 1967 War, Chahine began a new phase in his career with a series of more sober films that were critical of the social and political system in Egypt and seemed to have much to say about the reasons for the defeat of Egypt and the Arab countries in the war with Israel.
“Chahine wanted to see the problems of society honestly faced up to and to leave behind lyrical flattery or empty patriotism” in a series of films dubbed “the Quartet of the Defeat”, the exhibition notes say. These films, an adaptation of the novel Al-Ard (The Earth, 1969) by Egyptian novelist Abdel-Rahman Al-Sharqawi, Al-Ikhtiyar (The Choice, 1970), Al-Asfour (The Sparrow, 1973), and Awdat Al-Ibn Al-Dal (Return of the Prodigal Son, 1976), are often considered among Chahine's very best films.
In his search for a more independent style of film-making, or one less closely linked to political demands, Chahine was also looking for new forms of financing and distribution for his films, and in 1972 he set up his own production and distribution company, Misr International Films. This allowed him to recruit actors and production-team members who would stay the course of subsequent films, and in the early 1980s, following the success of Iskandriya Leh?, his first autobiographical film, Chahine began the series of Franco-Egyptian co-productions that characterised his work until his death in 2008.
This independence, and this honesty about himself — no other Arab film-director, and few in any other tradition, has put himself at the centre of such an extensive series of autobiographical or quasi-autobiographical films — led to further problems for Chahine, however, as the exhibition notes, and not necessarily only from the authorities as had been the case under the Nasser regime.
Iskandriya Leh, praised internationally, was banned in several Arab countries, perhaps because its release coincided with former Egyptian president Anwar Al-Sadat's peace overtures to Israel and because of the film's overall message of individualism and peaceful coexistence. A later film, Al-Muhajir (The Emigrant), a cinematic re-telling of the story of Joseph from the Old Testament of the Bible and the Quran, led to another form of controversy when Chahine was prosecuted in Egypt for blasphemy following its release in 1994.
For those familiar with Chahine's career, the Cinemathèque française exhibition is an opportunity to be reminded of old favourites through original publicity materials, working notes, and snippets of Chahine's films. There are also many touching artefacts, including rough lists of telephone numbers, diary entries, clipped-out newspaper articles, photographs of Chahine with various celebrities, and even office equipment taken from the Misr International Films offices in Champollion Street in Cairo, among them a gathering of staplers, rolls of sticky tape (for assembling negatives?), and a hole-punch.
For those less familiar with Chahine's work, the Cinemathèque has arranged an unusually complete retrospective of the director's films that includes both restored versions of the major films in what is an all-too-rare opportunity to see these projected on the big screen and lesser-known or rarely seen works including the early films from the 1950s, the Nasserist blockbuster Al-Nasr Salaheddin, and the Soviet-Egyptian co-production on the building of the Aswan High Dam Al-Nil wal-Hayat, apparently in its original version.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Youssef Chahine, exhibition and retrospective at the Cinemathèque française, Paris, until July 2019.


Clic here to read the story from its source.