Focus on Canadian Film: Beginning of the 3rd Millennium 2005 / Sabah / Canada 2005
Sabah, a 40-year-old Muslim living in Canada, falls in love with a Canadian. She is fairly panic-stricken about how her family will react, and the man’s offer to accept Islam into his life somehow doesn’t ease her mind....
The film focuses on a short span of time in the life of 40-year-old Muslim Sabah who lives in a large Canadian city with her many relatives. Her brother rules over the entire family with an iron hand; after the death long ago of her father only various generations of women remain. Her brother respects the observance of all Muslim religious and moral tenets, including the strict prohibition against relationships with men of another faith. The youngest generation has already figured out several tricks for getting out of arranged partnerships, but her brother cruelly proclaims her dead when the diffident and honest Sabah admits to a secret relationship with a kindly Canadian. The film is a light tale on the theme of racial and religious intolerance, this time viewed from an unusual angle.
90 min / Color, 35 mm
Director Ruba Nadda
/ Screenplay Ruba Nadda
/ Dir. of Photography Luc Montpellier
/ Music Geoff Bennett, Longo Hai, Ben Johannesen
/ Editor Teresa Hannigan
/ Producer Tracey Boulton
/ Production TL Boulton Productions
/ Cast Arsinée Khanjian, Shawn Doyle, Fadia Nadda, Jeff Seymour, Kathryn Winslow, David Alpay
/ Contact Celluloid Dreams
www: www.sabahthemovie.com
Ruba Nadda (b. 1972, Montreal) is a Canadian director of Syrian-Palestinian descent. Her parents settled in Canada in 1964 and her two younger sisters act in her films. In the past three years since studying English literature at York University in Toronto and attending a two-month course in filmmaking at New York University, she has made 12 short films. Before shooting Sabah (2005), she debuted with the feature I Always Come to You (2000). All her work deals with the daily lives of Arab women and the problems they face. Arab immigration to the West is also a recurring theme, and the director investigates how different generations of newcomers integrate into a foreign culture. She is an independent filmmaker and usually ends up financing her low-budget movies herself. She has also written a short story collection entitled Daughters of Palestine.
Celluloid Dreams
2, rue Turgot, 75009, Paris
France
Phone: +33 149 700 370
E-mail: [email protected]
Brigitte Hubmann
Film Institution Rep.
Ruba Nadda
Arsinée Khanjian
Actress
Jean Claude Mahé
Film Institution Rep.
Sébastien Chesneau
Distributor, Sales Agent
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.