Berliner Boersenzeitung - Saudi Arabia's growing cinema soft power

EUR -
AED 3.877263
AFN 71.772981
ALL 98.315178
AMD 417.992077
ANG 1.902274
AOA 961.646379
ARS 1065.63846
AUD 1.623711
AWG 1.900107
AZN 1.795498
BAM 1.956653
BBD 2.131019
BDT 126.12497
BGN 1.956012
BHD 0.3979
BIF 3118.232903
BMD 1.055615
BND 1.418645
BOB 7.293144
BRL 6.35005
BSD 1.055455
BTN 89.124266
BWP 14.418626
BYN 3.453587
BYR 20690.055578
BZD 2.127437
CAD 1.479096
CDF 3029.615052
CHF 0.932
CLF 0.037413
CLP 1032.328165
CNY 7.647962
CNH 7.65264
COP 4665.818656
CRC 539.032379
CUC 1.055615
CUP 27.9738
CVE 110.313602
CZK 25.269261
DJF 187.952808
DKK 7.45824
DOP 63.729285
DZD 140.959442
EGP 52.347756
ERN 15.834226
ETB 130.754169
FJD 2.394294
FKP 0.833215
GBP 0.831904
GEL 2.887123
GGP 0.833215
GHS 16.30703
GIP 0.833215
GMD 74.948498
GNF 9096.007499
GTQ 8.143742
GYD 220.747256
HKD 8.216744
HNL 26.703639
HRK 7.529976
HTG 138.373586
HUF 413.062985
IDR 16743.321915
ILS 3.855154
IMP 0.833215
INR 89.168334
IQD 1382.635354
IRR 44415.004389
ISK 144.904352
JEP 0.833215
JMD 166.293265
JOD 0.748747
JPY 159.906659
KES 136.912627
KGS 91.627175
KHR 4253.954795
KMF 492.447411
KPW 950.053172
KRW 1473.147814
KWD 0.324633
KYD 0.879604
KZT 540.513018
LAK 23164.205634
LBP 94514.845785
LKR 306.812268
LRD 189.45706
LSL 19.179368
LTL 3.116957
LVL 0.638531
LYD 5.149269
MAD 10.562203
MDL 19.325881
MGA 4928.171243
MKD 61.550456
MMK 3428.596604
MNT 3586.979987
MOP 8.460688
MRU 42.102549
MUR 49.084259
MVR 16.309004
MWK 1830.206348
MXN 21.576669
MYR 4.6943
MZN 67.461803
NAD 19.179914
NGN 1779.92539
NIO 38.836743
NOK 11.654107
NPR 142.598826
NZD 1.791653
OMR 0.406422
PAB 1.055465
PEN 3.960626
PGK 4.255855
PHP 61.940299
PKR 293.412992
PLN 4.308808
PYG 8231.587665
QAR 3.847195
RON 4.977439
RSD 116.959607
RUB 114.005969
RWF 1469.175121
SAR 3.965706
SBD 8.857234
SCR 14.412752
SDG 634.953141
SEK 11.52737
SGD 1.4169
SHP 0.833215
SLE 23.958381
SLL 22135.72543
SOS 603.177174
SRD 37.374085
STD 21849.100888
SVC 9.235069
SYP 2652.264409
SZL 19.187817
THB 36.359611
TJS 11.504469
TMT 3.705209
TND 3.334153
TOP 2.472358
TRY 36.522081
TTD 7.17216
TWD 34.386137
TZS 2792.746858
UAH 43.894539
UGX 3894.69747
USD 1.055615
UYU 45.209918
UZS 13577.982157
VES 49.882939
VND 26784.121438
VUV 125.324744
WST 2.946846
XAF 656.255457
XAG 0.034936
XAU 0.0004
XCD 2.852852
XDR 0.807371
XOF 656.246127
XPF 119.331742
YER 263.824545
ZAR 19.116202
ZMK 9501.802748
ZMW 28.470274
ZWL 339.907625
  • RELX

    0.2400

    47.05

    +0.51%

  • NGG

    0.5000

    63.33

    +0.79%

  • RBGPF

    1.0000

    62

    +1.61%

  • RIO

    0.2900

    62.32

    +0.47%

  • CMSD

    -0.0700

    24.36

    -0.29%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    24.52

    -0.2%

  • SCS

    -0.0700

    13.47

    -0.52%

  • GSK

    0.3100

    34.33

    +0.9%

  • AZN

    0.8400

    67.2

    +1.25%

  • BTI

    0.2300

    37.94

    +0.61%

  • VOD

    0.1100

    8.97

    +1.23%

  • RYCEF

    0.1100

    6.91

    +1.59%

  • BCC

    -2.0100

    146.4

    -1.37%

  • BP

    0.1700

    29.13

    +0.58%

  • JRI

    0.1700

    13.41

    +1.27%

  • BCE

    0.3900

    27.02

    +1.44%

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

Saudi 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."

(L.Kaufmann--BBZ)