-
US Supreme Court maintains mail access to abortion pill for now
-
Hantavirus ship heads to Netherlands after passengers flown home
-
Trump warns Mideast truce on 'life support', Iran says ready for any aggression
-
Frustrated Trump learns he doesn't have the cards on Iran
-
Cannes Film Festival defends male-dominated competition
-
Patel, Miller lead Delhi to record-breaking win over Punjab
-
Final hantavirus ship evacuations begin after weather delay
-
No longer peripheral: SKorean director makes Cannes history
-
Military strikes, gang massacres in Nigeria kill around 100 civilians
-
SNC Scandic Coin: Real assets meet digital utility
-
SNC Scandic Coin: реальные активы и цифровые возможности
-
Venezuela has 'never considered' becoming 51st US state: acting president
-
Wembanyama escapes playoff suspension after ejection: NBA source
-
Trump to suspend US gas tax as Iran war spikes prices
-
Macron announces 23 bn euros of investment at Africa summit
-
Oil rises, stocks mostly higher on US-Iran deadlock
-
SNC Scandic Coin: поєднання реальних активів та цифрової функціональності
-
Sinner demolishes Popyrin to stroll into Italian Open last 16
-
Dua Lipa sues Samsung in US over use of her likeness on TV box
-
White House press gala shooting suspect pleads not guilty
-
England women's great Mead to leave Arsenal at the end of the season
-
NATO 'could never be more important than today': Canada FM
-
Boycotters Spain, Ireland, Slovenia will not show Eurovision
-
Oil rises, stocks mixed on US-Iran deadlock
-
Tens of millions risk hunger as Hormuz standoff blocks fertiliser, UN official says
-
Beatles to open first London museum on site of last gig
-
Lewis-Skelly says leaders Arsenal know 'job is not yet done'
-
Boycotting Spain, Ireland, Slovenia will not show Eurovision
-
Every goalie 'illegally blocked' says West Ham's Hermansen after Arsenal agony
-
Thai police arrest 9 in largest ivory seizure in decade
-
Hantavirus: confirmed cases by nationality
-
US, French evacuees from hantavirus ship test positive
-
China seeks 'more stability' as it confirms Trump-Xi meet
-
Man City boss Guardiola backs Marmoush to play big role in run-in
-
Philippine lawmakers vote to impeach VP Sara Duterte
-
No end to deadlock as Iran, US reject talks terms
-
Iran hangs 'elite student' on espionage charges: NGOs
-
Party's over: China tells fans to end birthday blowouts for sport idols
-
Australia to quarantine six people from hantavirus ship
-
Groundbreaking: 'Controlled' quakes triggered under Swiss Alps
-
Nazi-looted portrait found in home of Dutch SS leader's family: art sleuth
-
US citizen from hantavirus ship tests positive
-
Hantavirus outbreak renews painful memories for Patagonian village
-
Myanmar complains over pariah treatment in ASEAN bloc
-
Domestic dominance not enough, Barca's ambition is European glory
-
Oil soars as Trump rejects Iran's terms
-
Spurs star Wembanyama ejected for elbowing Wolves' Reid
-
In India, heat-triggered insurance offers 'some relief'
-
Under-threat UK PM Starmer to attempt reset after disastrous polls
-
The first 48-team World Cup -- more opportunities, less jeopardy?
'Palestine 36' director says film is about 'refusal to disappear'
The director of Oscar-shortlisted film "Palestine 36" said her big-budget production about a crucial but little-known Arab rebellion is a statement about Palestinians "refusal to disappear".
Veteran filmmaker Annemarie Jacir started production on the sweeping historical epic just before Israel's devastating invasion of Gaza in October 2023.
Making the movie was a "financial disaster", she admitted in an interview with AFP, but encouraging critical reaction since its debut last September and its shortlisting for an Oscar have offered solace.
Nominated by Palestine for Best International Feature, it is the most cinematically ambitious of four productions that deal with the Israeli-Palestinian conflict that are in the running for an Academy Award in March.
"The cinema is not going to save us," said Jacir, a Palestinian born in Bethlehem in 1974 but now living in the Israeli port Haifa. "But it's about the refusal to disappear and this film for us was our refusal."
The Gaza war, sparked by an unprecedented attack by the Hamas militant group on Israel, saw US President Donald Trump and far-right Israeli government ministers openly discuss displacing Palestinians or annexing their remaining ancestral land.
Jacir explained that most accounts of modern Palestinian history begin with the creation of the state of Israel after World War II which led to the "Nakba" in 1948, the uprooting of nearly half the Palestinian population.
"We always start Palestinian history with the Nakba," she said.
As the title of her film suggests, she focuses on 1936 when colonial-era Britain was struggling to administer the holy land for which it assumed responsibility at the end of World War I.
Palestine was a hotbed of resentment and the scene of clashes between the Muslim-majority Palestinian population and newly arrived Jewish immigrants, most of whom were fleeing persecution in Europe.
"1936 is so critical and there's really been nothing done about it. And it sets the stage for everything," Jacir explained.
- 'Disaster' -
She follows a large cast of characters, from villagers losing their land to Zionist settlers, members of the corrupt Palestinian economic elite, as well as the brutally repressive British army and administrators.
Its mostly Arabic-speaking cast includes Oscar-winning British actor Jeremy Irons as a cynical British High Commissioner and Franco-Palestinian actress Hiam Abbass from "Succession" as a defiant village elder.
The project almost never made it to screens with the war in Gaza starting just as filming was about to start in the West Bank in late 2023.
Jacir had built a typical village from the 1930s over 12 months, but then had to abandon the site and move the cast to Jordan.
"We planted crops, and we built the bus, all the vehicles, the tanks, we made guns, the costumes" she told AFP. "Then we lost it all after October 7th... It was a nightmare, a financial disaster.
"Thank God for our financiers, including the BBC, the British Film Institute. Nobody abandoned us," she added.
The film is a sweeping fictionalised story set in the context of real events, with the dramatic climax being the Peel Commission which proposed the partition of Palestine and the creation of a Jewish state.
Ninety years later, with Palestinians limited to the destroyed Gaza enclave and the Israeli-controlled West Bank, and under constant pressure from settlers, Jacir says she no longer believes in a two-state solution.
Her vision? "You live as one people, one place without borders, without control. There is no other way."
She will find out later this month film her film gets the nod for an Oscar nomination as Best International Feature.
Another film about Palestinians, the gut-wrenching "The Voice of Hind Rajab" about a girl killed during the Gaza war, also made the 15-strong shortlist which is set to be reduced to five.
L.E.Campos--PC