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Fidaï
2012. France/Algeria. Damien Ounouri. 83 min.
U.S. premiere; Damien Ounouri present
Thursday, November 1, 2012, 7:00 p.m.
Theater 1 (The Roy and Niuta Titus Theater 1), T1
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Fidaï
2012. France/Algeria. Directed by Damien Ounouri. With Mohamed El Hadi Benadouda. In Arabic, a fidaï is a fighter who has sworn his life to a cause, unafraid to be a martyr. Now 70 years old, El Hadi is one of countless anonymous veterans who fought the war and then resumed life as an everyday citizen, ending the chapter of his life as a fidaï. On the 50th anniversary of Algerian independence, he recounts those years of struggle and hardship to his great-nephew, the director. Ounouri's documentary, made all the more timely by today's Arab insurgencies, is exquisitely filmed, at once intimate and lyrical. Fidaï was co-produced by Chinese master filmmaker Jia Zhang Ke, whose artistry seems to have sharpened the film’s focus and poetry. In Arabic, French; English subtitles. 83 min.
In the Film exhibition Mapping Subjectivity: Experimentation in Arab Cinema from the 1960s to Now, Part III
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