A New Day in Old Sana'a | |
Director: | Bader Ben Hirsi |
Producer: | Ahmed Abdali |
Cinematography: | Muriel Aboulrouss |
Editing: | Andrew Lloyd |
Distributor: | Felix Films Entertainment Limited |
Runtime: | 86 minutes |
Country: | Yemen |
Language: | English Arabic |
A New Day in Old Sana'a is a 2005 romantic drama film directed by Bader Ben Hirsi, a British playwright and director of Yemeni ancestry, and produced by Ahmed Abdali. It was shot in San‘a’, the capital of Yemen, and was the first Yemeni film to be shown at the Cannes Film Festival.[1]
The film was advertised as the first film to come out of Yemen.[2]
The running time of the film was 86 minutes, and versions were released in English and Arabic (with English subtitles).
In addition to Cannes, the film was screened at the Cairo International Film Festival; after its showing in Cairo, Hirsi received a prize of £E100,000 from the Egyptian Ministry of Culture.[3]
The film is shown through the eyes of Fredrico, a photographer from Italy.[4] Tariq (a friend of Federico)[4] is scheduled to marry Bilquis, the daughter of a rich judge.[1] However, while out in the city one night, he catches sight of a woman he believes to be Bilquis, and falls in love with her. The woman turns out to be a (a black plant applied like henna) artist named Ines, and Tariq ends up having to choose between the two.[4] The film ends with a shot of a jinn, played by Hirsi himself.[5]