Dubai Culture Opens Participation in Al Marmoom Short-Film Competition

The competition aims to enrich the local film scene, provide an innovative platform to support filmmakers and encourage them to share their experiences. WAM
The competition aims to enrich the local film scene, provide an innovative platform to support filmmakers and encourage them to share their experiences. WAM
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Dubai Culture Opens Participation in Al Marmoom Short-Film Competition

The competition aims to enrich the local film scene, provide an innovative platform to support filmmakers and encourage them to share their experiences. WAM
The competition aims to enrich the local film scene, provide an innovative platform to support filmmakers and encourage them to share their experiences. WAM

Dubai Culture and Arts Authority (Dubai Culture) has launched the open call for the Al Marmoom Short-Film Competition, held as part of the fourth Al Marmoom: Film in the Desert festival, Emirates News Agency (WAM) reported.

The competition aims to enrich the local film scene, provide an innovative platform to support filmmakers and encourage them to share their experiences and knowledge, inspiring new talent to join this field, WAM said Wednesday.

Dubai Culture invited all emerging filmmakers and creatives locally, regionally, and globally to participate and submit their works for the festival’s competition.

Applications are open from August 14 to September 30, after which a specialized committee comprising a group of experts, directors, and filmmakers will screen the applications and evaluate the submitted films, in preparation for announcing the list competing for the festival awards, which will be held at Al Marmoom Desert Conservation Reserve from January 3 to 12, 2025.

The competition includes four categories: documentaries, animated films, live-action, and films made using artificial intelligence. Eligible works will be selected based on a set of criteria related to quality and content. This open call targets all emerging filmmakers and directors, whether working individually or in groups, WAM said.

Participants are required to present distinctive ideas that express their artistic visions and commitment to innovation, in addition to ensuring that the work is original, recent, and not previously shown in any local, regional, or global festival or event.

The film should be between 3 and 30 minutes long, free from any offence to public morals, religions, or communities, and the participant must own all rights to the short film.

The previous Al Marmoom Short-Film Competition saw 56 short films competing within its three categories.



Jewels Stolen in Germany’s Green Vault Heist Back on Display

The jewelry piece "Aigrette for the hair in the shape of a sun" by August Gotthelf Globig (C) shows a missing piece during the presentation of recovered jewels from a burglary at the Historic Green Vault (Gruenes Gewoelbe) in Dresden, Germany, 13 August 2024. (EPA)
The jewelry piece "Aigrette for the hair in the shape of a sun" by August Gotthelf Globig (C) shows a missing piece during the presentation of recovered jewels from a burglary at the Historic Green Vault (Gruenes Gewoelbe) in Dresden, Germany, 13 August 2024. (EPA)
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Jewels Stolen in Germany’s Green Vault Heist Back on Display

The jewelry piece "Aigrette for the hair in the shape of a sun" by August Gotthelf Globig (C) shows a missing piece during the presentation of recovered jewels from a burglary at the Historic Green Vault (Gruenes Gewoelbe) in Dresden, Germany, 13 August 2024. (EPA)
The jewelry piece "Aigrette for the hair in the shape of a sun" by August Gotthelf Globig (C) shows a missing piece during the presentation of recovered jewels from a burglary at the Historic Green Vault (Gruenes Gewoelbe) in Dresden, Germany, 13 August 2024. (EPA)

Nearly five years after millions of euros' worth of jewellery was stolen in a museum heist in eastern Germany, visitors can once again admire nearly all of the precious pieces in person.

In November 2019, thieves stole pieces that contained more than 4,300 diamonds with an estimated value of over 113 million euros ($124 million), from the Gruenes Gewoelbe (Green Vault) museum in Dresden, in the eastern German state of Saxony.

Police have said most of the jewels stolen from the museum, which houses one of Europe's greatest art collections, have been recovered. Pieces still missing include an epaulette on which a precious stone known as the Dresden White Diamond was mounted.

Starting this week, the jewellery pieces will be back on display in their original spots - albeit in the same condition in which they were recovered in December 2022 as they are part of ongoing legal proceedings and still considered court property.

"There are certain things that perhaps absolute experts can see; we with the naked eye can actually barely see the damage," said Marion Ackermann, Dresden State Museums director general.

"And this damage is mainly due to the fact that they were either broken out during the crime ... or improperly stored by the perpetrators after the crime," Ackermann added.

Five men, all members of the same family, were sentenced to several years behind bars in May 2023 for their involvement.

The heist was a bitter lesson about security at the museum, which before had been considered one of the safest buildings in Europe, said Saxony premier Michael Kretschmer.

"We were shocked that it was actually possible, but we have drawn the necessary conclusions," he said on Tuesday.

The stolen Dresden collection was assembled in the 18th century by Augustus the Strong, Elector of Saxony and later King of Poland, who commissioned ever more brilliant jewellery as part of his rivalry with France's King Louis XIV.

The treasures survived Allied bombing raids in World War Two, only to be carted off as war booty by the Soviet Union.

They were returned to Dresden, the historic capital of the state of Saxony, in 1958.