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E. Nina Rothe

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The Diaries, because sometimes life needs more. 

A still from Hamida Issa’s ‘Places of the Soul’

A still from Hamida Issa’s ‘Places of the Soul’

The Qumra Diaries: Souq Waqif, "from desert to desert", Alice Rohrwacher and Kiyoshi Kurosawa

E. Nina Rothe March 22, 2019

On my last day in Doha, I spend the afternoon wandering around the Souq Waqif which I learned from a local filmmaker, literally translates as “the stand up souk.” In the olden days, before Qatar turned into the international, cosmopolitan country it is today, the sea would come straight into the alleys of the souk so the merchants had to stand up and pick up their wares during the tides. Thus the name, and actually while I wandered around checking out the shops, having a shawl sewn from a traditional flower fabric by a local tailor while drinking a karak chai (cardamon infused milky tea) and eating a chapatti flat bread filled with zaatar, I felt like I was transported back to those early days of the pearl divers and their haunting songs of the sea.

Doha is special place. I’ll never get tired of saying it. And their annual Qumra event, organized by the Doha Film Institute is sheer cinematic magic. Qumra is a meeting place, a five-days long networking session, a place to pitch, secure financing and ensure a screening chance for film projects. But it is also an occasion to recharge our collective passion for the movies. For journalists, producers and of course filmmakers, the atmosphere at Qumra offers an almost electric energy, a jolt of renewed hope in the future of the 7th art.

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In Cinema, Interviews, The Diaries Tags Alice Rohrwacher, Kiyoshi Kurosawa, Qumra, Qumra 19, Souq Waqif, Doha, Qatar, Museum of Islamic Art, Qumra working breakfast, Getty Images, Netflix, Japanese cinema, Italian cinema, masterclasses, Agnes Varda, Eugenio Caballero, Pawel Pawlikowski, Elia Suleiman, Hamida Issa, Places of the Soul, Antartica, Arabian desert, Gulf cinema, Saudi Arabia, H.E. Sheikha Mayassa Al-Thani, Fatma Al Remaihi, Hanaa Issa, DFI, Doha Film Institute, Cannes
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WO-YcsP8.jpeg

Inspired: Highlights from the 2019 International Film Festival Rotterdam

E. Nina Rothe February 2, 2019

I’d long heard about the Rotterdam International Film Festival and yet had never personally been here. IFFR will hereafter be a much craved stop on my itinerary of world cinema events. I can’t wait to see what next year has in store.

So what makes this cinephiles’ festival filled with independent gems, languid culture-filled days and inspiring evening talks by the masters so addictive? Well, that — what I just said. Turns out there is no festival in the world quite like IFFR.

And here are a few favorites of mine from this year’s edition.

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In Cinema, Fashion, Festival, The Diaries Tags IFFR, International Film Festival Rotterdam, Rotterdam, Netherlands, cinema, film festival, Bangla, Bertmans, de Doelen, The James, de Bijenkorf, Jean-Luc Godard, The Image Book, Peru, Guillermo Arriaga, Todos Somos Marineros, Miguel Angel Moulet, The Savage, El Savaje, The Best of Dorien B., Thrive Global, Take Me Somewhere Nice, Indemnes, Mexico, Bangladesh, BANGLA, Phaim Bhulyan, Rome, Torpignattara, Nadine Labaki, Capernaum, Alice Rohrwacher, Happy as Lazzaro, Italian cinema, Mexican cinema, The National, Susanna Nicchiarelli, Zhu Shengze, Zhengfang Yang, Dominga Sotomayor, Elmar Imanov, Azerbaijan, FRIPESCI, End of Season, Present.Perfect, Tiger Award, Bero Beyer, Alfredo Jaar
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A still from 'Ray & Liz' courtesy of Locarno Festival

A still from 'Ray & Liz' courtesy of Locarno Festival

The Locarno Diaries: 'Ray & Liz'', #Female Pleasure' and 'Likemeback'

E. Nina Rothe August 6, 2018

The greatest thing about the Locarno Festival is how accessible their venues are and how organic an experience watching great cinema becomes here. As author and filmmaker Emmanuel Carrère pointed out earlier, he is in Locarno on Jury duty, while at other festival you basically know what you can expect, here it's wonderful because the discoveries you make are completely unexpected.

Personally, I find it perfect to get up in the morning and catch the press screening of competition films at 9 a.m. at the Kursaal cinema and return there after lunch for more great things. Also sprinkled around town and culminating in the Piazza Grande screening each night, there are many wonderful films to be discovered. I mean, like Meg Ryan said during our public chat this past Saturday, the "Piazza Grande has 8,000 seats!" Now wrap your head around that.

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In Cinema, Festival, The Diaries Tags Ray & Liz, Locarno Festival, Locarno 71, #Female Pleasure, Likemeback, Leonardo Guerra Seràgnoli, Instagram, Italian cinema, Critics Week, Barbara Miller, Rome, Unorthodox, Japan, Somalia, India, Richard Billingham
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IFB.jpg

The importance of being Italian: Why so many of my fellow countrymen have been called to helm major film festivals

E. Nina Rothe June 22, 2018

With today's official announcement of Carlo Chatrian having been chosen as Artistic Director of the Berlinale starting in 2020, the Italians have truly taken over world cinema. Now, let me explain. 

Apart from, obviously, Alberto Barbera at the Venice Film Festival, Giona A. Nazzaro at Venice Critics' Week, Antonio Monda at Rome FF and Emanuela Martini in Torino, there are several more Italian cinephiles sprinkled around, now heading film festivals around the world. Take Marco Müller in Pingyao China and Eva Sangiorgi who was appointed head of the Viennale back in January of 2018, after former director Hans Hurch suddenly passed away last July. Then, just a couple of months before the Cannes Film Festival was set to kick off, another announcement rocked the film world when it was made public that Paolo Moretti would replace Edouard Waintrop as General Delegate of the Quinzaine des Réalisateurs starting with the 2019 edition of the beloved sidebar on the Croisette.So why are so many Italians snagging the top spots at these most coveted of film festivals? Well, I have a couple of theories. 

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In Cinema, Festival, The Diaries Tags Carlo Chatrian, Italian cinema, Paolo Moretti, Eva Sangiorgi, Federico Fellini, Luchino Visconti, Giuseppe Tornatore, Nanni Moretti, Pietro Germi, Bernardo Bertolucci, Berlinale, Viennale, Roberto Rossellini, Vittorio De Sica, Pier Paolo Pasolini, Marco Muller, Pingyao, Paolo Baratta, Antonio Monda, Rome FF, Torino FF, Emanuela Martini
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Actress Behnaz Jafari with filmmaker Jafar Panahi in a still from '3 Faces'

Actress Behnaz Jafari with filmmaker Jafar Panahi in a still from '3 Faces'

The last of the Cannes Diaries 2018: When all else fails, you can find me at the movies

E. Nina Rothe May 28, 2018

It was the best of times, it was the worst of times. Actually, this edition of the Festival de Cannes turned out to be a missed opportunity, for media and juries alike to truly take charge of the #TimesUp movement and make of it a lasting course instead of a passing trend. Yes, there were stairs filled with women in pretty dresses, there were hotlines that we could call if we felt threatened or harassed, but ultimately the big prizes went to the big boys. As they have for every edition of the festival, except once, in 1993 when Jane Campion made history as the first and only woman to win the Palme d’Or. 

Yet personally, I loved Cannes more than ever this year. I had a soft place to fall, in the form of a wonderful group of friends I spent my free time with, eating dinners we cooked together and drinking our morning coffee back at our cozy apartment with one breathtaking view. I mean, just look at the Disney fireworks for 'SOLO: A Star Wars Story' display from our terrace!

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In Cinema, Festival, The Diaries Tags Cannes, Festival de cannes, Cannes Film Festival, Jane Campion, TimesUp, Palme d'Or, SOLO: A Star Wars Story, Nadine Labaki, DPA gift lounge, Nathalie Dubois Sissoko, Nandita Das, The National, Capharnaum, caramel, refugees, Amir Naderi, selfies, Asghar Farhadi, Marriott Hotel, Carlton Hotel, Jafar Panahi, 3 Faces, Iranian cinema, Arab cinema, Iran, Abu Dhabi Film Festival, Dubai International Film Festival, UAE Pavilion, DIFF, CNN, Inside the Middle East, Saudi Arabia, Italian cinema, Italy, Marco Bellocchio, Gianni Zanasi, La Lotta, Troppa Grazia, Lucia's Grace, Alba Rohrwacher, La Strada dei Samouni, Stefano Savona, Euforia, Valeria Golino, Dogman, Matteo Garrone, Alice Rohrwacher, Happy as Lazzaro, Lazzaro Felice, Italian politics
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Lucia's Grace poster

The Cannes Diaries 2018: 'Lucia's Grace' ('Troppa Grazia') is a miracle of a film!

E. Nina Rothe May 19, 2018

One of the freshest and most romantic films I watched in Cannes was Gianni Zanasi’s ‘Lucia’s Grace’ which screened in the Directors’ Fortnight section. On Thursday night it was awarded the Label Europa Cinema prize and personally, I was elated. Zanasi’s film is another one of those modern Italian cinematic gems that have brought me home. Quite literally. 

I moved back to my birth country five years ago because its newest wave of movies and filmmakers made me once again proud of being Italian. And Zanasi’s film also features as Lucia one of the most exciting young actresses in indie cinema today, Alba Rohrwacher, whom we can definitely claim as Italian but who is so much bigger and better than that label alone. Her wit, the way she can take the most basic of characters and build around them grand nuances and subtle mannerisms make her so cool that she may as well read the phone book on the big screen. And I’ll pay to watch that.

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In Cinema, Festival, Interviews, The Diaries Tags Lucia's Grace, Troppa Grazia, Cannes, Cannes Diaries, Cannes Film Festival, Festival de cannes, Label Europa Cinema prize, Gianni Zanasi, Italy, Italian cinema, Alba Rohrwacher, Madonna, Virgin Mary, Elio Germano, Hadas Yaron, Japan, Last Shadow Puppets
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Valeria Golino and Alba Rohrwacher in Laura Bispuri's 'Daughter of Mine'© Vivo film / Colorado Film / Match Factory Productions / Bord Cadre Films

Valeria Golino and Alba Rohrwacher in Laura Bispuri's 'Daughter of Mine'

© Vivo film / Colorado Film / Match Factory Productions / Bord Cadre Films

The Berlinale Diaries: Elia Suleiman talks Qumra plus Laura Bispuri's 'Daughter of Mine'

E. Nina Rothe February 19, 2018

From the fabulous women of 'Daughter of Mine' to a wondrous man, my early Sunday morning at Berlinale was spent in the company of Elia Suleiman, the Palestinian filmmaker extraordinaire and Artistic Advisor of the Doha Film Institute. 

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In Cinema, Festival, The Diaries Tags Doha Film Institute, Qumra, Daughter of Mine, Figlia Mia, Valeria Golino, Alba Rohrwacher, Laura Bispuri, Berlinale, Berlin, Berlin Film Festival, Hanna Issa, Elia Suleiman, Mohamed Ben Attia, Palestine, Amal Al-Muftah, Sh'hab, Basil Khalil, Ave Maria, Dora Bouchoucha, Weldi, Gianfranco Rosi, Cannes, Oscars, Sandy Powell, Bennett Miller, Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Andrey Zvyagintsev, Sara Casu, Italian cinema, Arab cinema, Qatar, Doha
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