RADICAL MODERNISMS: RETRACING ARAB AND NORTH AFRICAN FILM HISTORIES is a two-part program curated by Peter Limbrick, Professor of Film and Digital Media at UC Santa Cruz and author of Arab Modernism as World Cinema: The Films of Moumen Smihi.
This program addresses aesthetic and cultural experiments that emerged in Arab and North African cinema from the 1960s, experiments that showed filmmakers and artists responding to histories of colonialism and the challenges of the present. Drawing on local vernaculars and international influences alike, these filmmakers created radical forms that deserve continued attention and discussion as well as urgent efforts of preservation and recirculation.
Retracing Arab and North African Film Histories (Part 2): The films included in the package are rare and vital treasures of Moroccan and diasporic Maghrebi filmmaking. We are proud to present the US premiere of the recently restored Ali in Wonderland (1976), a stunning film about Maghrebi migration and life in France that resonates with Moumen Smihi’s earlier film on this topic in Part One of our program. Also included are two rarely-seen films by the Moroccan filmmaker Ahmed Bouanani and his collaborators: the recently restored “city symphony” film Six and Twelve (1968) and the radical archival essay film Memory 14 (1971) which turns to the French colonial archive to create a searing and poetic essay on Moroccan history. The program also includes another recent restoration: the feature film About Some Meaningless Events (1974), directed by Mostafa Derkaoui, which is recirculating decades after it was first banned in Morocco. Together these films offer audiences an exciting exploration of the fragile and often overlooked cinematic legacy of Morocco and the Maghreb.
Livestream Panel Discussion: October 24 at 3 pm EDT
Cinematic Archives, Preservation, and Circulation in the Maghreb.
The screening will be accompanied by a live stream panel discussion addressing the question of archives and the urgent demands of preservation and recirculation of work that is at risk of disappearance.
Film Screening: October 21-24:
Six and Twelve (Six et Douze), Ahmed Bouanani, Mohammed A. Tazi, Abdelmajid Rechiche, Morocco, 1968, 18 min
Memory 14 (Mémoire 14), Ahmed Bouanani, Morocco, 1968, 24 min
About Some Meaningless Events (De quelques évènements sans signification), Mostafa Derkaoui, Morocco, 1974, 76 min
Also included for a limited period of 6 hours on October 23 starting at 12pm EDT:
Ali in Wonderland (Ali au pays des merveilles), Djouhra Abouda et Alain Bonnamy, France, 1976, 59 min US PREMIERE ! To access the film Register HERE
This program is co-sponsored by the Center for the Middle East and North Africa at UC Santa Cruz
Radical Modernisms: Retracing Arab and North African Film Histories is presented as part of the ArteEast legacy program Unpacking the ArteArchive, preserving and presenting over 17 years of film and video programming by ArteEast.
Six and Twelve (Six et Douze), Ahmed Bouanani
Synopsis: Six and Twelve is one of a series of short films and documentaries produced under the auspices of the Centre Cinématographique Marocain in the years after Moroccan independence. While most of these were utilitarian in nature, Bouanani, Tazi, and Rechiche took a different route with this film, creating a modernist “city symphony” film that documented six hours in the life of the city of Casablanca. Combining a hard bebop soundtrack with stunning black and white cinematography and a radical editing style, the film stands as a document to the energetic experimentation of this period of Moroccan art and cinema.
Bio: Ahmed Bouanani (1938-2011) was a filmmaker, poet, novelist, and painter. As filmmaker, he worked in many capacities as an editor, writer, and director. His sole feature-length film as director is Mirage (Assarab, 1979) but he directed and edited many more works of short fiction and documentary, including Six and Twelve (Six et Douze, 1968), Memory 14 (Mémoire 14, 1971) and The Four Springs (Les quatres sources, 1977). His abiding interest in the combination of Moroccan popular practices and languages with cinematic and artistic modernism is present across his remarkable oeuvre.
- Year1968
- Runtime16 minutes
- CountryMorocco
- DirectorAhmed Bouanani, Majid Rechich, Mohamed Abderrahman Tazi.
- ScreenwriterAhmed Bouanani
- ProducerOmar Ghannam
- Executive ProducerCentre Cinématographique Marocain
- CinematographerMajid Rechich and M.A. Tazi with Ahmed Bouanani
- EditorAhmed Bouanani
RADICAL MODERNISMS: RETRACING ARAB AND NORTH AFRICAN FILM HISTORIES is a two-part program curated by Peter Limbrick, Professor of Film and Digital Media at UC Santa Cruz and author of Arab Modernism as World Cinema: The Films of Moumen Smihi.
This program addresses aesthetic and cultural experiments that emerged in Arab and North African cinema from the 1960s, experiments that showed filmmakers and artists responding to histories of colonialism and the challenges of the present. Drawing on local vernaculars and international influences alike, these filmmakers created radical forms that deserve continued attention and discussion as well as urgent efforts of preservation and recirculation.
Retracing Arab and North African Film Histories (Part 2): The films included in the package are rare and vital treasures of Moroccan and diasporic Maghrebi filmmaking. We are proud to present the US premiere of the recently restored Ali in Wonderland (1976), a stunning film about Maghrebi migration and life in France that resonates with Moumen Smihi’s earlier film on this topic in Part One of our program. Also included are two rarely-seen films by the Moroccan filmmaker Ahmed Bouanani and his collaborators: the recently restored “city symphony” film Six and Twelve (1968) and the radical archival essay film Memory 14 (1971) which turns to the French colonial archive to create a searing and poetic essay on Moroccan history. The program also includes another recent restoration: the feature film About Some Meaningless Events (1974), directed by Mostafa Derkaoui, which is recirculating decades after it was first banned in Morocco. Together these films offer audiences an exciting exploration of the fragile and often overlooked cinematic legacy of Morocco and the Maghreb.
Livestream Panel Discussion: October 24 at 3 pm EDT
Cinematic Archives, Preservation, and Circulation in the Maghreb.
The screening will be accompanied by a live stream panel discussion addressing the question of archives and the urgent demands of preservation and recirculation of work that is at risk of disappearance.
Film Screening: October 21-24:
Six and Twelve (Six et Douze), Ahmed Bouanani, Mohammed A. Tazi, Abdelmajid Rechiche, Morocco, 1968, 18 min
Memory 14 (Mémoire 14), Ahmed Bouanani, Morocco, 1968, 24 min
About Some Meaningless Events (De quelques évènements sans signification), Mostafa Derkaoui, Morocco, 1974, 76 min
Also included for a limited period of 6 hours on October 23 starting at 12pm EDT:
Ali in Wonderland (Ali au pays des merveilles), Djouhra Abouda et Alain Bonnamy, France, 1976, 59 min US PREMIERE ! To access the film Register HERE
This program is co-sponsored by the Center for the Middle East and North Africa at UC Santa Cruz
Radical Modernisms: Retracing Arab and North African Film Histories is presented as part of the ArteEast legacy program Unpacking the ArteArchive, preserving and presenting over 17 years of film and video programming by ArteEast.
Six and Twelve (Six et Douze), Ahmed Bouanani
Synopsis: Six and Twelve is one of a series of short films and documentaries produced under the auspices of the Centre Cinématographique Marocain in the years after Moroccan independence. While most of these were utilitarian in nature, Bouanani, Tazi, and Rechiche took a different route with this film, creating a modernist “city symphony” film that documented six hours in the life of the city of Casablanca. Combining a hard bebop soundtrack with stunning black and white cinematography and a radical editing style, the film stands as a document to the energetic experimentation of this period of Moroccan art and cinema.
Bio: Ahmed Bouanani (1938-2011) was a filmmaker, poet, novelist, and painter. As filmmaker, he worked in many capacities as an editor, writer, and director. His sole feature-length film as director is Mirage (Assarab, 1979) but he directed and edited many more works of short fiction and documentary, including Six and Twelve (Six et Douze, 1968), Memory 14 (Mémoire 14, 1971) and The Four Springs (Les quatres sources, 1977). His abiding interest in the combination of Moroccan popular practices and languages with cinematic and artistic modernism is present across his remarkable oeuvre.
- Year1968
- Runtime16 minutes
- CountryMorocco
- DirectorAhmed Bouanani, Majid Rechich, Mohamed Abderrahman Tazi.
- ScreenwriterAhmed Bouanani
- ProducerOmar Ghannam
- Executive ProducerCentre Cinématographique Marocain
- CinematographerMajid Rechich and M.A. Tazi with Ahmed Bouanani
- EditorAhmed Bouanani