Art at the pOp uP alZahra

10 06 2013

Flyer 72

 

Take a wonder town the Talla in Fez medina and after some time you will come across pOp uP alZahra, a tiny art space with the feel of carnival outside to lure the public into a space reminiscent of the andalucian palace alZahra. Once inside one will encounter artworks from artists as far afield as New York and as close a patch as Fez and Sefrou. Elegant traditional Calligraphy, contemporary collaged astrolabes, andalucian motifs and the essence of a garden are all presented to entice and inspire the viewer. Come on over, pOp on by and step inside before it all disappears again until next year.

Culture Vultures is proud to present this years portfolio of artists, Margaret Lanzetta, David Packer, Abdelsellam Rihani, Mohammed Charkaoui, Yassine Khaled, Heidi Vogels, Jess Stephens and Jewelry by Moroccan Bling.

dPacker

A premier for Fez is the screening of Hidden Waters, a documentary made in 2012 by Joe Lukawski,  investigating the under currents of Fez’ ancient city.

Joe Lukawski is a Paris based documentary filmmaker and freelance journalist. A former Fulbright grantee to Morocco, his work has focused on water in Fez and the important links between this life-giving resource, urban space and social life. From the medina of Fez to the canals of Venice, his films privilege the relationship between the individual subject, space and social history. For Lukawski, ‘Les eaux cachées’ represents a work of ethnography, at the same time as it aspires to treat history and reflect on the future. In the andalous gardens of Fez, through the passages of the old city beneath which water still flows, and through the stories of Fez’s people, this film brought Lukawski into contact with the rich traditions of Fez’s people and some of the complex urban problems many of them face.

JoeCV

Hidden Waters can be seen anytime at pOp uP alZahra, should you wish the film to be started from the beginning upon your arrival please ask a member of alZahra.

pOp uP alZahra- Talla Kbira. (10a.m. – 8p.m.) 7th – 16th of June 2013.

Flyer backA472

 

 





Hindi Mood for Marrakech Film Festival

29 11 2012

FIFM 2012

Indian cinema is celebrating its centenary next year and the Marrakech International Film Festival will be the first to celebrate with a special tribute paid to Hindi cinema.  For its 12th edition, the Festival will welcome the largest Indian delegation ever assembled at an international festival, and screen a great number of Hindi films throughout the week, including every night at the open-air screenings on the famous Jemaa El Fna Square, with some of Bollywood’s greatest stars and filmmakers presenting their films to Moroccan audiences who are long-time Bollywood fans.

Following the sudden death of director and producer Yash Chopra, the Marrakech International Film Festival will also pay tribute to this icon of Indian cinema, whose films include such classics as DEEWAAR (1975) – film that revealed actor Shah Rukh Khan; SILSILA (1981); LAMHE (1991); and more recently VEER-ZAARA (2004). In the words of Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, Yash Chopra “entertained many generations with his rare creativity and established the popularity of Indian cinema internationally.”

During this tribute to Indian cinema, the Festival will screen Yash Chopra’s last film, JAB TAK HAI JAAN staring Shah Rukh Khan, Katrina Kaif and Anushka Sharma, in the presence of Shah Rukh Khan.

For more information and the full program see http://en.festivalmarrakech.info





8 10 2012

 

CINEMA 

Wednesday, October 10, 19h Rex Cinema
Presented by the French Institute in Fez

Members and students: 10 dh
Non-members: 20 dh

Directed by Umut Dag
Koldas with Nihal, Begüm Akkaya, Vedat Erincin
Genre Drama
Duration 1:33 min
Austrian nationality 

Fatma lives in Vienna with her husband, Mustafa, and their six children. After all these years, she tries to preserve the traditions and the social prestige of their family of Turkish immigrants. Ayse, a girl of 19 years is chosen in a village in Turkey to officially marry their son and join the family. The reality is quite different, in secret, because the Fatma decided Ayse is promised to the father, as his second wife. Thus, a relationship of trust and complicity will develop between the two women. But this event will jeopardize the stability of the entire family, who will face the eyes of the community and new challenges …





Cinema in Fez…wait…she’s still alive.

17 01 2012

Just when you though cinema in Fez was on the way to the cemetery there is a pulse…a glimmer of hope. The French Institute has recently collaborated with Cinema Rex to present their film program in the dark salon in the cinema. Sit back on a red velvet seat and let your self be swept away.

A film by Michel Hazanavicius

This season’s program starts on Wednesday the 18th of January at 7 p.m. with the 2011 film The Artist by Michel Hazanavicius based around a movie star inHollywood in 1927.

Join the French Inst on Facebook  to keep informed of their cultural program http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100002064234330





Dont miss out. One night only!

29 11 2011

PINA

Showing this Friday( 2nd December) is a spectacular film not to be missed. PINA is a feature-length dance film in 3D with the ensemble of the Tanztheater Wuppertal Pina Bausch, featuring the unique and inspiring art of the great German choreographer, who died in the summer of 2009.

PINA is a film for Pina Bausch by Wim Wenders.

He takes the audience on a sensual, visually stunning journey of discovery into a new dimension: straight onto the stage with the legendary Tanztheater Wuppertal Pina Bausch ensemble, he follows the dancers out of the theatre into the city and the surrounding areas of Wuppertal – the place, which for 35 years was the home and centre for Pina Bausch’s creativity.

Médiathèque de l’Institut français de Fès. Friday at 19h.

 





Morocco’s Vanishing Cinemas

28 10 2011

Rialto , Casablanca

Walking by the the Cinema Boujloud in Fez is a sad experience for anyone who loves old movie houses. This once bustling cinema is closed and used for storage of market goods. The seating was still in place in the auditorium when seen in 2006. Cinema Boujaloud is symptomatic of the Moroccan cinema market which has been suffering a severe decline during the past years.

The rich heritage of Moroccan cinemas is endangered, but those who care about the future of film and their architectural value are working hard to save them, writes Derek Workman.

In 2007, Moroccan actor Tarik Mounim was in Tetouan waiting on a film set between takes. He was appearing in Goodbye Mothers,  Morocco’s entry for the 2009 Oscars in the Best Foreign Film Category - which tells the story of the Jewish exodus fromMorocco in the 1960s. While he waited for his scenes to be shot, he looked around the Art Deco cinema Cine Español, said to be the most beautiful inMorocco. He got to chatting with the owner, of the Español and two other cinemas in the city. It might seem pretty good, owning three cinemas, the owner told him, but it is a far cry from the twenty-five that his grandfather owned throughout the country.

“Speak to any older Moroccan and they will tell you that the cinema was a major part of their life,” Tarik says. “It was at the physical heart of a city or the neighbourhood, it was where people met and passed the time, it was where they learned about the world and heard new words. It was their encyclopaedia.”
Tarik had spent seven years studying to be an actor and working in theatre inParis, and had only recently returned toMorocco. As far as he was concerned, he was there to work, but he began to discover in just how parlous a state Moroccan cinema was; not just the production of movies, but the crumbling structures themselves, many of which had been built in the 1930s to 1950s at the height of the Art Deco period. (Miami is recognised as having some of the most beautiful art deco architecture in existence, but at it’s height it had only around five percent of art deco buildings that Casablanca had, many of the most beautiful of which were cinemas, and sadly, much of it now lost.)

“In it’s heyday, twenty-five distributors brought films fromFrance,Egypt,India,China, theUSA, andGreat Britain,” he says. “It is the only country in the world with cinemas that had the capacity to hold 1,500 people; the biggest could seat2,800. In the 1960s there were more than fifty million tickets sold a year, in 2010 there were only two million sold, and where once there were 280 cinemas operating throughout the country, now there are only thirty-seven, most of them showing movies from Bollywood.”

It’s the story of cinema worldwide, but where many countries replaced the neighbourhood movie houses with out-of-town multiplexes, this didn’t happen as much inMorocco, as the entrance price was simply prohibitive to most people.

There’s now a whole generation that has no idea what it’s like to visit a cinema, to enjoy the romance, the spectacle, the sense of wonder that the big screen brings. Now they sit at home watching a bootlegged DVD.

In 2008 Tarik and a group of friends formed Save Cinemas in Morocco (SCIM) in time for the International Film Festival of Marrakech, one of the biggest events devoted to Moroccan cinema. They convinced some of the actors, directors and other participants to wear their distinctive black T-shirt with its deep red logo, and people began to take notice. To encourage local interest they began showing old films in abandoned cinemas during the festival so that people in the Medina could see what it was like to visit the local ‘flicks’. Entrance was free, and they played to packed houses.

“The first film we showed was on original equipment from 1956 and it was wonderful, just like going to the movies decades ago – although some of the seats were a bit uncomfortable after so many years! Everyone had a great time, and each year during the festival we do the same. We even have people who are visiting the official festival coming to watch.”

Even though there are only thirty-seven cinemas still showing movies on a regular basis, there are one hundred and sixty still in existence throughout the country, although most are now falling into ruin. But it isn’t just the buildings themselves that is the problem; a lot of the seats and fitting are now missing, and it is increasingly difficult to find projectors and other equipment needed to restore a cinema to working order.

“We’re looking for help worldwide from people who can either help us with equipment or expertise,” says Tarik. “We did a presentation at the Cannes Film Festival this year, which went down really well, and we’ve been offered help by Unifrance, a French film association. We’ve still got a long way to go, though.”
Saving the architectural heritage of Art Deco is worthy in itself, but Save Cinemas in Morocco wants to go beyond that. Every cinema that is saved is a venue for a young film-maker to show his work. At a time when international producers are bringing fewer and fewer projects to Morocco, the Moroccan film industry is finding itself in almost as perilous a state as the cinemas it now no longer uses. Once hearts of the community, these could be a way of breathing life into the neighbour hood and give future Steven Spielbergs the chance to have their work flicker across the silver screen.

More info: http://www.savecinemasinmarocco.com/

Derek Workman is an English journalist living in Valencia City, Spain.

Thanks to http://riadzany.blogspot.com/ for this article





Hidden Waters – A film on the waters of Fez

10 10 2011

A documentary project inFezby Joe Lukawski

photo by Omar Chennafi

Why Water? Because it is humanity’s most vital resource. Period.

Why Fez? The advancement of clean-water technologies and sustainable practices in urban planning and design surrounding water have recently emphasized Morocco, and Fez in particular, as a site where new urban solutions can yield significant socio-economic benefits. Its current location chosen by Moulay Idriss II for the river running through, Fez has been celebrated for its history with water – its ornately tiled fountains, the nearby spas at Moulay Yacoub and Sidi Harazem, and the sounds of water coursing through medieval underground channels at night.

Today, however, the river suffers from pollution. The historic water system is in disrepair, damaging Fez’s buildings as the damp rises. Tales of homes collapsing, in part due to excessive moisture, feature regularly in the Moroccan press. In a crowded cityscape, the poor state of a rare resource’s infrastructure has major socio-economic ramifications. State-supplied water is now expensive for many, and the cost is rising alonside the threat to Fez’s urban heritage. This film will explore the role of water in Fez’s urban tradition and the problems with disrepair and access to clean water that many medina inhabitants face everyday. It will also follow international and local actors as they conceive of aFez where the river once again flows clear.

The film – Les Eaux Cachées will combine an ethnographic-leaning documentary approach with the creativity and aesthetics of Fez‘s over 1200 year history. We will be consulting Fassi photographer Omar Chennafi throughout the production to capture the essence of Fez in filming urban scenes and in a new approach to historical re-enactment. The film will not only speak to experts and expats (who have become keen on restoring old houses), but to the people of Fez, all of whom have stories to share, and some of whom have decades of experience in dealing with the waters of Fez.

To contribute, contact and or find out more go to  http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/joelukawski/hidden-waters-a-film-on-the-water

 








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