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Welcome to the 2nd London Kurdish
Film Festival!
Films, both new and old, will explore the rich diversity of
Kurdish culture and provide London cinemagoers with the
opportunity to discover Kurdish Cinema. Following the success
of last year’s event, this year the festival expands to two
weeks and will present an amazing variety of feature films,
documentaries and shorts, from all over the world, made by
Kurdish film makers or about Kurdish issues. There will also
be discussions with filmmakers and workshops. Many of the
films in the Festival focus on the Halabja Massacre of 17
March 1988, when 5,000 Kurdish people died as a result of
Saddam Hussein’s chemical gas bombardment.
Feature film highlights include: Kurdish filmmaker Jano
Rosebiani’s JIYAN, the first feature film made about the
Halabja Massacre, winner of the special jury award at this
year’s Seattle International Film Festival; MAROONED IN IRAQ,
the eagerly anticipated second feature film of Bahman Ghobadi,
whose previous A TIME FOR DRUNKEN HORSES was a highlight of
last year’s festival; the British premiere of Handan Ipekci’s
HEJAR (Büyük Adam Küçük Ask), this controversial film was
nominated to represent Turkey at the Academy Awards in the
Best Foreign Film category and then banned in Turkey; Roland
Suso Richter’s A HANDFUL OF GRASS from Germany portrays the
Kurdish exile experience through the eyes of a child; an
opportunity to re-view a critically acclaimed film by Abbas
Kiarostami, THE WIND WILL CARRY US; Nino Jacusso’s ESCAPE TO
PARADISE tells the story of a Kurdish family who claim asylum
in Switzerland; the first feature film scripted and filmed by
Kurdish guerrilla fighters, TIREJ; a preview of Michael
Winterbottom and Tony Grisoni’s IN THIS WORLD, a powerful road
movie capturing the desperate struggles of refugees to cross
Europe; a rare chance to see three classic Kurdish films: Umit
Elci’s MEM AND ZIN (1991), Nizamettin Aric’s A SONG FOR BEKO
(1992) and Sahin Gok’s SIYABEND AND XACE (1993); the UK
premiere of Tayfun Pirselimoglu’s INNOWHERELAND, the story of
a mother’s attempts to find her politically active son who has
disappeared; Hiner Saleem’s LONG LIVE THE BRIDE… AND THE
LIBERATION OF KURDISTAN, a vibrant comedy set amidst the
100,000-strong Kurdish community in Paris; Ibrahim Selman’s A
SILENT TRAVELLER, the story of divided loyalties in a Kurdish
village; Kadir Sozen’s WINTERFLOWER telling the story of a
deported immigrant’s struggle to sneak back into Germany to be
re-united with his wife and son; Elizabeth Rygard’s HOUSE OF
HEARTS about a seven-year-old boy, Osman, whose parents leave
Turkey to work in Europe; Ravin Asaf’s YELLOW DAYS, from
Germany also focuses on the Halabja massacre and expresses the
Kurdish people’s optimistic outlook on life.
Documentary highlights include a documentary about the
first elected Kurdish woman to the Turkish Parliament, Leyla
Zana by Kudret Gunes.
The programme will be complemented by an eclectic mix of
short and low budget films, including Simon Brown and Maria
Pavlou’s RIGHTS OF PASSAGE, an excellent short fiction film by
students at Leeds Metropolitan University, about two Kurdish
friends trying to cross the Channel to get to England.
Invited guests include: Ravin Asaf (director YELLOW DAYS),
Miraz Bezar (director BERIVAN), Umit Elci (director MEM AND
ZIN), Fidan Firat (actress ESCAPE TO PARADISE), Bahman Ghobadi
(director MAROONED IN IRAQ), Huseyin Karabey (filmmaker), Jano
Rosebiani (director JIYAN), Hiner Saleem (director LONG LIVE
THE BRIDE…), Ayten Mutlu Saray (director DEATH IN EXILE),
Ibrahim Selman (director A SILENT TRAVELLER) and Kadir Sozen
(director WINTERFLOWER, producer YELLOW DAYS).
All films will have English subtitles except several short
films and documentaries.
The festival is presented by the Kurdish Film Festival
Organising Committee in conjunction with the Rio Cinema.
Introduction by Bahman
Ghobadi
Nothing is more pleasurable than having an all
Kurdish cast and crew when making a full-length feature -
Kurdish players, assistants and production group – especially
if they are from the mountainous areas of Kurdistan. You speak
in Kurdish to everyone involved and the script and dialogue
are in the same language.
It is, at the same time, a shame and depressing that one
hundred years after the birth of cinema, we do not have a
branch called "Kurdish cinema", despite everything I have just
mentioned.
A strange thing has happened in the Kurdistan of today:
there are fewer parents wishing their children to become
engineers or doctors, but most of them wish their children to
be film makers. Today in Kurdistan more than two hundred young
Kurdish boys and girls are busy learning the art of
filmmaking. In the street where I live, there are twelve of
these filmmakers. A friend of mine, who was a taxi driver, has
now sold his taxi, bought a film camera and is making a
film.
You can find the best short films of the present day among
the young Kurdish filmmakers in Kurdistan. Iran's Kurdistan
province is in the top flight of short-film making. You can
see the camera and the filming group in the richest and
poorest parts of the province and it has become a
matter-of-fact, everyday event in the lives of the people.
People will even come to you to see if you need help and
residents in the area will even bring us tea from nearby
houses.
It is strange and I am happy too that during the making of
two full length films so many good things happened to me in
Kurdistan. This of course has nothing to do with Bahman
Ghobadi, it is the nature of the cinema. It is a magical
potion that has enchanted the Kurds. These days you do not see
anyone with a weapon in their hands, but the camera, the
greatest cultural weapon of our age, has replaced the gun.
More interesting is the fact that I have been receiving a
number of letters inviting me to various Kurdish festivals
world-wide, in England, Argentina, Iraq, Turkey, Germany, etc.
I hereby congratulate all my friends who are energetically
following up such important events. I hope that I can make two
or three full-length Kurdish films in the next few years and
witness the display of twenty to thirty Kurdish films in such
festivals.
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