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Raja Amari

Raja Amari (born 4 April 1971) is a Tunisian film director[1] and script writer. She is best known for her films Satin Rouge/Red Satin (2002), and Dowaha/Les Secrets/Buried Secrets (2009), both of which have earned international awards and recognition.

Raja Amari
Raja Amari official photo
Born (1971-04-04) April 4, 1971 (age 52)
NationalityTunisian
EducationFrench Literature, University of Tunis
Alma materUniversity of Tunis
OccupationFilm director

Early life and education Edit

Born in Tunis, Amari trained in dance at the Conservatoire de Tunis, gaining first prize in dance in 1992.[1] She then studied Italian at the Società Dante D'Alighieri in Tunis and later studied French Literature at the University of Tunis. For two years she wrote for Cinécrits, a film magazine edited by the "Association Tunisienne pour la promotion de la critique cinematographic." In 1995, Amari attended FEMIS (L'Institut de Formation et d'Enseignement pour les Metiers de l'Image et du Son) in Paris[2] to study screenwriting.[3] After graduating in 1998, she began to work on her film portfolio.[3] Her film Satin Rouge was screened at la Berlinale 2002. Her film Buried Secrets was an official selection at the 2009 Venice International Film Festival.

Career Edit

Raja Amari has been said to have a "transvergent" style in her work. Stacey Weber-Fève, argued Amari's style means her work transcends national cinema and has the ability to connect with a "national identity" depending on the given context and temporality of her films.[4] Will Higbee furthers the idea of "transvergent" filmmaking as a cinema that, "views the exchange between the global and the local not as taking place within some abstract or undefined 'global framework'." Rather, "difference and imbalances of power" between and within film industries tend to shape cinema.[5]

When asked about her influences, Amari responded in an interview with Indiewire that they include François Ozon and Arnaud Desplechin.[6]

"I have always wanted to make a film revolving around belly dancing. I trained for many years as a belly dancer at the Conservatoire de Tunis [Academic Dance Institute in Tunis]. I also grew up watching musicals of the golden age of Egyptian cinema from the 1940s and 1950s that are still played on television today. My mother and I loved the well-known belly dancer Samia Gamal and the singer Farid al-Atrash." -Raja Amari, Interview with Bouziane Daoudi in Zeitgeist Films[1]

Film Edit

Satin Rouge / Red Satin (2002) Edit

Satin Rouge follows widowed Tunisian mother Lilia, (Hiam Abbas) as she radically transforms from housewife to cabaret dancer. Her transformation begins when she becomes suspicious of her teenage daughter, Selma (Hend el Fahem) of engaging in a secret relationship with Chokri (Maher Kamoun), a darbouka drummer in Selma's dance class. To find out more, Lilia decides to follow Chokri one day. On her escapade, she follows him into his second workplace: a cabaret club. After overcoming her initial shock, Lilia becomes drawn towards the dancers and drum music. The women are very different from Lilia: they wear colourful clothing, they are showing their midriffs, and they are dancing in a sensual manner to the drumbeat. After befriending the lead dancer, Folla (Monia Hichri), Lilia is convinced to start dancing in the cabaret club. While Lilia begins dancing nightly, she simultaneously begins a romantic relationship with Chokri, who is still unaware that Lilia is Selma's mother. When Chokri ends his affair with Lilia, she is heartbroken. She later finds out it is because Selma has asked Chokri to meet her and Chokri, realizing his relationship with Selma is getting serious, accepts. The uneasy 'first' meeting Selma organizes between Chokri and Lilia solidifies Lilia's full transformation. When at the start of the film she is seen as a sad, bored, and submissive woman who rarely leaves the comforts of home, she is now a dominant matriarchal figure, which is reestablished with Lilia's glance in the mirror at herself prior to Chokri and Selma's arrival.[3]

"Typically, in Arab films and Tunisian films you have a woman who is in conflict with the society, and she'll fight against it. I didn't want that. That was not my subject. Lilia, the character played by Haim Abbass, actually finds her freedom in the context of what I call social hypocrisy. She is involved in a society that is hypocritical in the sense that there are two worlds out there: the world of the night and the world of the day. What you do--what you really do--you do not show. She finds a compromise in the sense that society is like that. She just adapts to society. She does what she wants, but she doesn't show it to the world."[7] -Raja Amari, Indiewire, August 20, 2002

Amari’s work, particularly Red Satin has been argued to have opened up new avenues and opportunities for the portrayal of Tunisian women in film and society. Author Stacey Weber-Fève asserts that Amari’s portrayal of the protagonist, Lilia, performing housework in the first few scenes of the film, “captures concretely the possibility for (re)appropriating female representation in contemporary North African cinema.”[4] She also asserts that Amari, “levies new debates addressing interpretations of performances of women’s traditional roles and desire for self-expression in contemporary Tunisian society by engaging in a multilayered manner the ideological implications of this traditional social construct of the housewife and her comportment.”[4]

Printemps Tunisien / Tunisian Spring (2014) Edit

In Melissa Thackway and Olivier Bartlet's review of the 2015 Panafrican Film and Television Festival of Ouagadougou (Festival Panafricain du Cinéma de Ouagadougou, FESPACO) in "FESPACO 2015: After the Transition, What Next?", they remark that Amari's film about the Tunisian Spring was the only film that stood out among the 'Features' portion of the festival. They noted that the film was "a quality television drama about a group of young musicians' diverging response to the turbulence of the Arab Spring."[8]

Personal life Edit

Raja Amari currently resides in Paris, France.[4]

Filmography Edit

  • Le Bouquet / The Bouquet, 1995
  • Avril / April, 1998
  • Un soir de juillet / An Evening in July, 2000
  • al-Sitar al-ahmar / Satin Rouge / Red Satin, 2002
  • Seekers of Oblivion, [DOC] 2004
  • Dowaha / Les secrets / Secrets, 2009
  • Tunisian Spring, 2014
  • Foreign Body, 2016[9][10]

Awards and nominations Edit

Year Award Film Result Reference
1998 Special Jury Prize at Milano Film Festival Avril/April Won [3]
1998 Special Jury Prize at Tunis Short Films Festival Avril/April Won [3]
1998 Best Cinematography Award at International Short Film Festival, Greece Avril/April Won [3]
1998 Prix de la Qualité at Centre national du cinéma et de l'image animée (CNC) Avril/April Won [1]
2001 First Prize at Milan Festival Un soir de juillet/An Evening in July Won [1]
2001 Golden Dhow (Best short feature film) at Zanzibar Film Festival Un soir de juillet/An Evening in July Won [1]
2002 New Director's Showcase Award at Seattle International Film Festival Satin rouge/Red satin Won [6]
2002 Best African Film Award at Montreal World Film Festival Satin rouge/Red satin Won [11]
2002 Audience Award Maine International Film Festival Satin rouge/Red satin Won [1]
2002 Best Feature Film Award at Torino Film Festival Satin rouge/Red satin Won [12]
2002 Special Mention for William Holden Screenplay Award at Torino Film Festival Satin rouge/Red satin Won [12]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Rebecca Hillauer (2005). Encyclopedia Of Arab Women Filmmakers. American University in Cairo Press. pp. 370–75. ISBN 978-977-424-943-3. Retrieved 26 June 2012.
  2. ^ Stacey Weber-Feve (28 February 2010). Re-Hybridizing Transnational Domesticity and Femininity: Women's Contemporary Filmmaking and Lifewriting in France, Algeria, and Tunisia. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 104–5. ISBN 978-0-7391-3451-1. Retrieved 26 June 2012.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Martine, Florence (2011). Screens and Veils: Maghrebi Women's Cinema. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press. p. 114. ISBN 978-0-253-35668-0.
  4. ^ a b c d Weber-Fève, Stacey (2010). "Housework and Dance as Counterpoints in French-Tunisian Filmmaker Raja Amari's Satin rouge". Quarterly Review of Film and Video.
  5. ^ Higbee, Will (2007). "Beyond the (trans)national: towards a cinema of transvergence in postcolonial and diasporic francophone cinema(s)". Studies in French Cinema. 7 (2): 79–91. doi:10.1386/sfci.7.2.79_1.
  6. ^ a b Schultz, Kate (August 20, 2002). "INTERVIEW: Self-Empowerment by Way of the Midriff; Raja Amari's 'Satin Rouge'". Indiewire. Indiewire. Retrieved January 31, 2016.
  7. ^ Schultz, Kate (August 20, 2002). "INTERVIEW: Self-Empowerment by Way of the Midriff; Raja Amari's 'Satin Rouge'". Indiewire. Indiewire. Retrieved January 31, 2016.
  8. ^ Barlet, Olivier; Thackway, Melissa (Fall 2015). "FESPACO 2015: After the Transition, What Next?". Black Camera. Indiana University Press. 7 (1).
  9. ^ "A Tunisian refugee makes a place for herself in France in well-crafted drama 'Foreign Body'". Los Angeles Times. March 15, 2018.
  10. ^ "French-Tunisian Auteur Raja Amari on Sensual Drama 'Foreign Body'". Variety Magazine. December 10, 2016.
  11. ^ "Awards of the Montreal World Film Festival - 2002". Montreal World Film Festival. World Film Festival. 2016. Retrieved February 6, 2016.
  12. ^ a b "Winners of 20th Torino Film Festival". Torino Film Festival. Torino Film Festival. Retrieved February 6, 2016.

External links Edit

raja, amari, born, april, 1971, tunisian, film, director, script, writer, best, known, films, satin, rouge, satin, 2002, dowaha, secrets, buried, secrets, 2009, both, which, have, earned, international, awards, recognition, official, photoborn, 1971, april, 19. Raja Amari born 4 April 1971 is a Tunisian film director 1 and script writer She is best known for her films Satin Rouge Red Satin 2002 and Dowaha Les Secrets Buried Secrets 2009 both of which have earned international awards and recognition Raja AmariRaja Amari official photoBorn 1971 04 04 April 4 1971 age 52 Tunis TunisiaNationalityTunisianEducationFrench Literature University of TunisAlma materUniversity of TunisOccupationFilm director Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 2 1 Film 2 1 1 Satin Rouge Red Satin 2002 2 1 2 Printemps Tunisien Tunisian Spring 2014 3 Personal life 4 Filmography 5 Awards and nominations 6 References 7 External linksEarly life and education EditBorn in Tunis Amari trained in dance at the Conservatoire de Tunis gaining first prize in dance in 1992 1 She then studied Italian at the Societa Dante D Alighieri in Tunis and later studied French Literature at the University of Tunis For two years she wrote for Cinecrits a film magazine edited by the Association Tunisienne pour la promotion de la critique cinematographic In 1995 Amari attended FEMIS L Institut de Formation et d Enseignement pour les Metiers de l Image et du Son in Paris 2 to study screenwriting 3 After graduating in 1998 she began to work on her film portfolio 3 Her film Satin Rouge was screened at la Berlinale 2002 Her film Buried Secrets was an official selection at the 2009 Venice International Film Festival Career EditRaja Amari has been said to have a transvergent style in her work Stacey Weber Feve argued Amari s style means her work transcends national cinema and has the ability to connect with a national identity depending on the given context and temporality of her films 4 Will Higbee furthers the idea of transvergent filmmaking as a cinema that views the exchange between the global and the local not as taking place within some abstract or undefined global framework Rather difference and imbalances of power between and within film industries tend to shape cinema 5 When asked about her influences Amari responded in an interview with Indiewire that they include Francois Ozon and Arnaud Desplechin 6 I have always wanted to make a film revolving around belly dancing I trained for many years as a belly dancer at the Conservatoire de Tunis Academic Dance Institute in Tunis I also grew up watching musicals of the golden age of Egyptian cinema from the 1940s and 1950s that are still played on television today My mother and I loved the well known belly dancer Samia Gamal and the singer Farid al Atrash Raja Amari Interview with Bouziane Daoudi in Zeitgeist Films 1 Film Edit Satin Rouge Red Satin 2002 Edit Satin Rouge follows widowed Tunisian mother Lilia Hiam Abbas as she radically transforms from housewife to cabaret dancer Her transformation begins when she becomes suspicious of her teenage daughter Selma Hend el Fahem of engaging in a secret relationship with Chokri Maher Kamoun a darbouka drummer in Selma s dance class To find out more Lilia decides to follow Chokri one day On her escapade she follows him into his second workplace a cabaret club After overcoming her initial shock Lilia becomes drawn towards the dancers and drum music The women are very different from Lilia they wear colourful clothing they are showing their midriffs and they are dancing in a sensual manner to the drumbeat After befriending the lead dancer Folla Monia Hichri Lilia is convinced to start dancing in the cabaret club While Lilia begins dancing nightly she simultaneously begins a romantic relationship with Chokri who is still unaware that Lilia is Selma s mother When Chokri ends his affair with Lilia she is heartbroken She later finds out it is because Selma has asked Chokri to meet her and Chokri realizing his relationship with Selma is getting serious accepts The uneasy first meeting Selma organizes between Chokri and Lilia solidifies Lilia s full transformation When at the start of the film she is seen as a sad bored and submissive woman who rarely leaves the comforts of home she is now a dominant matriarchal figure which is reestablished with Lilia s glance in the mirror at herself prior to Chokri and Selma s arrival 3 Typically in Arab films and Tunisian films you have a woman who is in conflict with the society and she ll fight against it I didn t want that That was not my subject Lilia the character played by Haim Abbass actually finds her freedom in the context of what I call social hypocrisy She is involved in a society that is hypocritical in the sense that there are two worlds out there the world of the night and the world of the day What you do what you really do you do not show She finds a compromise in the sense that society is like that She just adapts to society She does what she wants but she doesn t show it to the world 7 Raja Amari Indiewire August 20 2002Amari s work particularly Red Satin has been argued to have opened up new avenues and opportunities for the portrayal of Tunisian women in film and society Author Stacey Weber Feve asserts that Amari s portrayal of the protagonist Lilia performing housework in the first few scenes of the film captures concretely the possibility for re appropriating female representation in contemporary North African cinema 4 She also asserts that Amari levies new debates addressing interpretations of performances of women s traditional roles and desire for self expression in contemporary Tunisian society by engaging in a multilayered manner the ideological implications of this traditional social construct of the housewife and her comportment 4 Printemps Tunisien Tunisian Spring 2014 Edit In Melissa Thackway and Olivier Bartlet s review of the 2015 Panafrican Film and Television Festival of Ouagadougou Festival Panafricain du Cinema de Ouagadougou FESPACO in FESPACO 2015 After the Transition What Next they remark that Amari s film about the Tunisian Spring was the only film that stood out among the Features portion of the festival They noted that the film was a quality television drama about a group of young musicians diverging response to the turbulence of the Arab Spring 8 Personal life EditRaja Amari currently resides in Paris France 4 Filmography EditLe Bouquet The Bouquet 1995 Avril April 1998 Un soir de juillet An Evening in July 2000 al Sitar al ahmar Satin Rouge Red Satin 2002 Seekers of Oblivion DOC 2004 Dowaha Les secrets Secrets 2009 Tunisian Spring 2014 Foreign Body 2016 9 10 Awards and nominations EditYear Award Film Result Reference1998 Special Jury Prize at Milano Film Festival Avril April Won 3 1998 Special Jury Prize at Tunis Short Films Festival Avril April Won 3 1998 Best Cinematography Award at International Short Film Festival Greece Avril April Won 3 1998 Prix de la Qualite at Centre national du cinema et de l image animee CNC Avril April Won 1 2001 First Prize at Milan Festival Un soir de juillet An Evening in July Won 1 2001 Golden Dhow Best short feature film at Zanzibar Film Festival Un soir de juillet An Evening in July Won 1 2002 New Director s Showcase Award at Seattle International Film Festival Satin rouge Red satin Won 6 2002 Best African Film Award at Montreal World Film Festival Satin rouge Red satin Won 11 2002 Audience Award Maine International Film Festival Satin rouge Red satin Won 1 2002 Best Feature Film Award at Torino Film Festival Satin rouge Red satin Won 12 2002 Special Mention for William Holden Screenplay Award at Torino Film Festival Satin rouge Red satin Won 12 References Edit a b c d e f g Rebecca Hillauer 2005 Encyclopedia Of Arab Women Filmmakers American University in Cairo Press pp 370 75 ISBN 978 977 424 943 3 Retrieved 26 June 2012 Stacey Weber Feve 28 February 2010 Re Hybridizing Transnational Domesticity and Femininity Women s Contemporary Filmmaking and Lifewriting in France Algeria and Tunisia Rowman amp Littlefield pp 104 5 ISBN 978 0 7391 3451 1 Retrieved 26 June 2012 a b c d e f Martine Florence 2011 Screens and Veils Maghrebi Women s Cinema Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press p 114 ISBN 978 0 253 35668 0 a b c d Weber Feve Stacey 2010 Housework and Dance as Counterpoints in French Tunisian Filmmaker Raja Amari s Satin rouge Quarterly Review of Film and Video Higbee Will 2007 Beyond the trans national towards a cinema of transvergence in postcolonial and diasporic francophone cinema s Studies in French Cinema 7 2 79 91 doi 10 1386 sfci 7 2 79 1 a b Schultz Kate August 20 2002 INTERVIEW Self Empowerment by Way of the Midriff Raja Amari s Satin Rouge Indiewire Indiewire Retrieved January 31 2016 Schultz Kate August 20 2002 INTERVIEW Self Empowerment by Way of the Midriff Raja Amari s Satin Rouge Indiewire Indiewire Retrieved January 31 2016 Barlet Olivier Thackway Melissa Fall 2015 FESPACO 2015 After the Transition What Next Black Camera Indiana University Press 7 1 A Tunisian refugee makes a place for herself in France in well crafted drama Foreign Body Los Angeles Times March 15 2018 French Tunisian Auteur Raja Amari on Sensual Drama Foreign Body Variety Magazine December 10 2016 Awards of the Montreal World Film Festival 2002 Montreal World Film Festival World Film Festival 2016 Retrieved February 6 2016 a b Winners of 20th Torino Film Festival Torino Film Festival Torino Film Festival Retrieved February 6 2016 External links EditRaja Amari at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Raja Amari amp oldid 1126311109, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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