Thank God it’s Friday by Jan Beddegenoodts
This documentary chronicles the daily life in the Palestinian village Nabi Saleh and its opposing Israeli settlement Halamish.
Wajib by Annemarie Jacir
The tense details of the relationship between Shadi and his father come to a head challenging their fragile and very different lives.
Infiltrators by Khaled Jarrar
The daily travails of Palestinians of all backgrounds as they seek routes through, under, around, and over a bewildering matrix of barriers.
Nazareth 2000 by Hany Abu-Assad
Returning to his native city just months before the new millennium, filmmaker Hany Abu-Assad captures the daily, idiosyncratic beats of Nazareth.
Womanhood, an Egyptian Kaleidoscope by Florie Bavard
through their interviews the participants question the current stereotypes imposed upon them, while reflecting upon the gendered roles in the (post)revolutionary process.
Witness from the East by Ayed Nebaa
The film sheds light on Ryuichi Hirokawa’s arrival to the Dalia kibbutz in the Galilee Heights and the outbreak of the 1967 War months after his arrival.
Out of Life by Maroun Baghdadi
The film is based on the real-life experience of Roger Auque who was abducted in Beirut on the 13th of January 1987 and then released by the ‘Organization for Revolutionary Justice’ on the 27th of November 1987.
Lebanon, Land of Honey and Incense by Maroun Baghdadi
The film recounts stories of the Civil War from the experience of two French doctors.
Beirut Oh Beirut by Maroun Baghdadi
Framed within the drama of an impossible love story, the film casts several characters, a Muslim lawyer, a young Christian woman and a worker from the southern countryside, whose lives intertwine.
Little Wars by Maroun Baghdadi
The story of Lebanon’s civil war in 1975 through three characters.
Waves by Ahmed Nour
The mental & psychic structure of the so-called ‘Egyptian revolution generation’, reconstructing facts related to Egypt’s far and near history.
Rags and Tatters by Ahmad El Sayed
A journey of one man’s search for an identity, during the first few days of the Egyptian revolution.
Living Skin by Fawzi Saleh
This documentary that explores the lives of Shoushou and Mohammad Farag, two children who live and work in the tanneries in Egypt.
In the Last Days of the City by Tamer El Said
Khalid, a 35-year-old filmmaker, is struggling to captures the soul of his city while facing loss in his own life.
Chaos, Disorder by Nadine Khan
Manal, Zaki and Mounir are in their twenties, living in a confined community where basic needs are met yet chaos and disorder brew.
Hedi - Mohamed Ben Attia
Hedi is a simple young man. He is not very talkative, not very reactive and does not expect much from the life that is traced for him.
The Sea is Behind by Hicham Lasri
Tarik wears makeup and dresses as a woman. He dances on a cart drawn by a dying horse and a father who doesn’t watch him anymore.
Until the Birds Return by Karim Moussaoui
Mourad is a businessman who rose to success in Algeria in the 2000s. Now he's a new man who wants to stay away from trouble. Aisha is done with the past.
As I Open My Eyes by Leila Bouzid
Tunis, summer of 2010. A few months before the revolution, Farah turns 18. She joins a politically-engaged band of musicians and discovers freedom and love against her mother Hayet’s will, who is more conscious of Tunisia and its taboos.
Rihla by ONORIENT
ONORIENTOUR is a citizens' agenda of travelling journalism: three explorers toured around six countries of the Arab world for six months…