
Marking the one-year anniversary of the devastating Beirut blast, this program of films and videos from Lebanese artists and filmmakers conveys their direct experience assimilating the overwhelming experience of loss and trauma. Two of the works are a response to the Beirut blast, which shook the city on August 4, 2020, while the other two were created as a response to the 2006 Lebanon war with Israel. From the political and performative to the poetic, these subjective works emerged from the rubble of a collapsed present.
Featuring works by Charbel Samuel Aoun, Ali Cherri, Carol Mansour, Wael Noureddine
Warning
Some of the films in this program contain graphic and violent content that may be distressing to some viewers.
Viewer discretion is advised.
July Trip synopsis: Beirut, July 2006. The Israeli bombings strike the city. While Beirut is still on fire, the filmmaker starts a journey across his natal land. The film is not a documentary - although the images are burning real - but an essay. Using two complementary techniques, the 16 mm film and HDV, the artist questions the deep foundations of the documentary genre. The eye of the cameras goes through a country in a state of terror, it records the immediate effects of the war when it touches the civilians. Wael Noureddine films what we fear to face, and that has become a sensational icon through international press: death in its crudest angle. We can almost touch the victims, feel the bombings when they seize. But the artist also questions silence itself, the daily lives of the Lebanese, hiding behind their curtains. News images, curtains, shutters, darkness: everything hides life itself. In a poignant and harsh way, the artist shows another trip that unveils what lies under these screens: how can one face a war that won't tell its name? The trip starts for these young people with various drugs before they roam between the ruins of their city. "Is there anybody there?" asks a man, as he lifts up the debris of their daily life. More than an escape, the trip would be here as a cry for life.
Bio:
Wael Noureddine (Lebanon, 1978) is a writer, journalist, and poet. His films depict, in a literary and critical way, real situations. They try to grasp the remains, the physical and mental scars from the war in the Middle East while resisting subjugation and resignation. His film "from Beirut with love" was selected in many festivals around the world. In July 2006, while the war was breaking out, he went to Beirut to shoot "July Trip".
- Year2006
- Runtime35 minutes
- LanguageArabic, French
- CountryLebanon, France
- Rating18+
- NoteWarning: This film contains graphic and violent content. Viewer discretion is advised.
- DirectorWael Noureddine
- CinematographerWael Noureddine
- EditorWael Noureddine
- ComposerFJ Ossang
- Sound DesignThomas Buet
Marking the one-year anniversary of the devastating Beirut blast, this program of films and videos from Lebanese artists and filmmakers conveys their direct experience assimilating the overwhelming experience of loss and trauma. Two of the works are a response to the Beirut blast, which shook the city on August 4, 2020, while the other two were created as a response to the 2006 Lebanon war with Israel. From the political and performative to the poetic, these subjective works emerged from the rubble of a collapsed present.
Featuring works by Charbel Samuel Aoun, Ali Cherri, Carol Mansour, Wael Noureddine
Warning
Some of the films in this program contain graphic and violent content that may be distressing to some viewers.
Viewer discretion is advised.
July Trip synopsis: Beirut, July 2006. The Israeli bombings strike the city. While Beirut is still on fire, the filmmaker starts a journey across his natal land. The film is not a documentary - although the images are burning real - but an essay. Using two complementary techniques, the 16 mm film and HDV, the artist questions the deep foundations of the documentary genre. The eye of the cameras goes through a country in a state of terror, it records the immediate effects of the war when it touches the civilians. Wael Noureddine films what we fear to face, and that has become a sensational icon through international press: death in its crudest angle. We can almost touch the victims, feel the bombings when they seize. But the artist also questions silence itself, the daily lives of the Lebanese, hiding behind their curtains. News images, curtains, shutters, darkness: everything hides life itself. In a poignant and harsh way, the artist shows another trip that unveils what lies under these screens: how can one face a war that won't tell its name? The trip starts for these young people with various drugs before they roam between the ruins of their city. "Is there anybody there?" asks a man, as he lifts up the debris of their daily life. More than an escape, the trip would be here as a cry for life.
Bio:
Wael Noureddine (Lebanon, 1978) is a writer, journalist, and poet. His films depict, in a literary and critical way, real situations. They try to grasp the remains, the physical and mental scars from the war in the Middle East while resisting subjugation and resignation. His film "from Beirut with love" was selected in many festivals around the world. In July 2006, while the war was breaking out, he went to Beirut to shoot "July Trip".
- Year2006
- Runtime35 minutes
- LanguageArabic, French
- CountryLebanon, France
- Rating18+
- NoteWarning: This film contains graphic and violent content. Viewer discretion is advised.
- DirectorWael Noureddine
- CinematographerWael Noureddine
- EditorWael Noureddine
- ComposerFJ Ossang
- Sound DesignThomas Buet