An intimate and warm story of a life entwined with a deep-rooted sense of belonging, and the inconvenience of aging in a world that continues to move at pace.
Films — by Language
- Arabic
- Bahasa Indonesian
- Basque
- Cantonese
- Catalan
- Cook Islands Māori
- Creole Portuguese
- Danish
- Dari
- Dutch
- English
- Faroese
- Farsi
- Fijian
- Filipino
- French
- Georgian
- German
- Greek
- Hungarian
- Icelandic
- Inuktitut
- Italian
- Japanese
- Kinyarwanda
- Korean
- Korubo
- Kurdish
- Macedonian
- Mandarin
- Manjak
- Nepali
- Norwegian
- Palestinian Arabic
- Pashutu
- Polish
- Portuguese
- Rohingya
- Romanian
- Russian
- Samoan
- Spanish
- Swedish
- Te reo Māori
- Thai
- Turkish
- Venda
- Wolof
- Yoruba
Arabic
Chronicles from the Siege
Palestinian-Syrian director Abdallah Alkhatib’s Berlin Film Festival winner is an absurdist, inventive tapestry of tales from a besieged city, where the desires of its citizens become sparks of resistance against oblivion.
Do You Love Me
A striking panorama of national collective memory told entirely through archive material in this playful, immersive journey through Lebanon’s history and culture.
Phantom Beirut
أشباح
Interweaving fiction and reality, Phantom Beirut's striking restoration refreshes a landmark of Lebanese cinema, bringing its vivid, haunting portrait of 1980s Lebanon to a new generation.
A Sad and Beautiful World
Nujum al'amal w al'alam
Romantic and sharp, this is a story of two souls bound by fate, a country on the brink of collapse, and a love story that refuses to give up on either.
With Hasan in Gaza
مع حسن في غزّة
In rediscovered 2001 camcorder footage, acclaimed Palestinian director Kamal Aljafari goes in search of a man he once met when they were prisoners, in a heartfelt tribute to the lost of Gaza, and the life that persists.
Yesterday the Eye Didn't Sleep
A truck in flames, a woman gone, and two sisters left to pay the price... Shot without a script using a real Bedouin family in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley, this lyrical debut is a film about what women must sacrifice to survive.