‘Jeanne d’Arc Masriya’ documentary to participate in CWFF Tour

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Mon, 02 Apr 2018 - 10:06 GMT

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Mon, 02 Apr 2018 - 10:06 GMT

Egyptian Jeanne d’Arc - CILAS official Facebook event page

Egyptian Jeanne d’Arc - CILAS official Facebook event page

CAIRO – 2 April 2018: The 2016 Egyptian biography-documentary “Jeanne d’Arc Masriya” (the Egyptian Joan of Arc), was selected by China Women's Film Festival (CWFF) to participate in its fifth CWFF Tour. The tour started on March 31, and will continue until July 22, travelling through 10 cities in Southern, Central and Northern China, and Hong Kong.
"Jeanne d’Arc Masriya" has been selected alongside 13 other films, out of a total of 600 films from all over the world, to compete within the festival's Independent Film Competition. The screenings will take place in Fuzhou, Quanzhou, Jinan, Taiyuan, Chengdu, Tianjin, Shenyang, Shenzhen, Zhuhai, and Kunming.
“Jeanne d’Arc Masriya” was recently screened at the Cairo Institute for Liberal Arts and Sciences in Darb al-Ahmar on January 16. The documentary was directed by Egyptian filmmaker Iman Kamel.

“Jeanne d’Arc Masriya” discusses the experiences of Egyptian women following the January 2011 revolution through their defiant art forms. In the film, the director Iman Kamel, finds the diary of a fictional young Bedouin girl named Jehanne in the western deserts of Egypt. In the diary, Jehanne writes of wanting to break free from the restrictions of a male-dominated world and become a dancer. Kamel sets out to find Jehanne by connecting with seven other female Egyptian artists.

Joan of Arc, the famous and iconic historical figure, was a young peasant French girl who rose in the ranks of the French army and fought against the English, managing to reach significant victories in the "Hundred Years War". She claimed to have been receiving visions of Christian saints showing her the path to justice and victory. She was eventually captured by the English and executed by public burning based on different criminal charges, including heresy and cross-dressing. Joan of Arc was later pronounced a martyr and a saint.

“Jeanne d’Arc Masriya” compares elements of the historical Joan of Arc’s struggle against the state and patriarchal nature of Europe with Egyptian women’s plight as artists. Kamel was inspired by the 1929 silent film “The Passion of Joan of Arc”, directed by Theodor Dreyer. In a 2016 interview, Kamel explained that her inspiration drew from Dreyer’s focus on specific aspects of Joan of Arc’s character through her time in prison, “where she was questioning herself and her visions, and was attacked by patriarchs.”

Through meetings with the seven artists, the film explores issues that surround Egyptian women and their art after the revolution through themes such as guilt and state repression. Artists featured in the film include Nahla Sebaie, a jewelry maker; Salma el-Tarzi, a cartoon animator; and Dina el-Wedidi, a musician.

The film is a combination of poetry and narration, mythical and fantastical elements and stories, dance and performance, and documentary footage. It explores the different kinds of art created by Egyptian women after the January 2011 revolution from the lens of political and social resistance, as well as hope and aspirations for the future.

“Egyptian Jeanne d’Arc” was screened at the 2016 Dubai International Film Festival as well as various other festivals. Iman Kamel has won an award and earned nominations for her previous work “Beit Sha’ar” (Nomad’s House), which is also a documentary that deals with the struggles and experiences of two Bedouin women in Egypt.

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