Another View 2009 / Laila's Birthday / Palestine, Tunisia, Netherlands 2008
Aging Abu Laila is a judge who is forced to drive a cab because the government has no money to pay him. One morning Abu gets into his yellow taxi fretting over a promise he made his wife: to be back by eight o’clock in order to attend his daughter’s birthday party. A chaotic workday in Palestine, however, begins to place obstacles in his way. Director Rashid Masharawi tries to find support in an optimistic outlook on domestic realities, oriented towards the objective values of interpersonal relations.
Aging Abu is a judge who is forced to drive a cab because the government has no money to pay him. One morning Abu gets into his yellow taxi fretting over a promise he made his wife: to be back by eight o’clock in order to attend his daughter Laila’s birthday party. His various fares come and go but Abu doesn’t forget his promise. A chaotic workday in Palestine, however, begins to place obstacles in his way. Confusion on the streets and in ideas, corruption and bureaucracy, demonstrations, and even the efforts of ordinary people to come to terms with everyday problems and the tense political situation – all this enters the protagonist’s cab and tries his patience. Director Rashid Masharawi is one of those Middle Eastern filmmakers who espouses a relatively moderate political position, and who tries to find support in an optimistic outlook on domestic realities, oriented towards the objective values of interpersonal relations.
72 min / Color, 35 mm
Director Rashid Masharawi
/ Screenplay Rashid Masharawi
/ Dir. of Photography Tarek Ben Abdallah, Nestor Sanz
/ Music Kais Sellami
/ Editor Pascal Chavance
/ Producer Mohamed Habib Attia, Peter van Vogelpoel, Rashid Masharawi
/ Production CineTeleFilms, Sweetwater Pictures
/ Cast Mohamed Bakri, Areen Omari, Nour Zoubi
/ Contact Fortissimo Films
Rashid Masharawi (b. 1962, Gaza) is a self-taught moviemaker who began working in the film industry in the 1980s. In 1994 he shot his first film, Curfew (Hattai ishaar akhar), which took the UNESCO Prize at the Cannes IFF. His second film, Haifa (1996), earned a number of awards at festivals in Rome, Barcelona, Egypt, and Tunisia. His other films also attracted international attention: Ticket to Jerusalem (2002) and Waiting (Attente, 2005). Masharawi is also a talented documentary filmmaker (e.g. Live from Palestine, 2002, Arafat, mon frère, 2005).
Fortissimo Films
Van Diemenstraat 100, 1013 CN, Amsterdam
Netherlands
Phone: +31 206 273 215
Fax: +31 206 261 155
E-mail: [email protected]
First-hand brews throughout the year.
Be among the first to learn about upcoming events and other news. We only send the newsletter when we have something to say.