Saudi Film Festival Director: Motion Pictures Are Dreams Come True

Group photo of the winners at the Saudi Film Festival's fifth edition
Group photo of the winners at the Saudi Film Festival's fifth edition
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Saudi Film Festival Director: Motion Pictures Are Dreams Come True

Group photo of the winners at the Saudi Film Festival's fifth edition
Group photo of the winners at the Saudi Film Festival's fifth edition

Saudi Film Festival director Ahmed Al Mulla, at the 2019 filmmaking’s event closing ceremony, told participants that a sixth edition of the festival will be held, saying that “motion pictures are dreams come true”.

Similar to the 2019 edition, the sixth film festival will also be held at the King Abdulaziz Center for World Culture (Ithra).

Awards were handed out to 20 winners in four of the festival’s categories: best script, students' films, documentary films and feature films. The sum total of all prizes combined amounts to $114,000.

“Zero Distance”, an Ithraa production directed by Abdul Aziz Al-Shalahi bagged the feature film’s Golden Palm Award.

Shalahi, for his part, says the festival's central objective is not to hand out awards to filmmakers, but empower and boost inter-connectivity amongst the Saudi movie-making industry.

“Cave” by Abdulrahman Sondakji won best documentary.

Moaz Al Awfi, who won two prizes for the movie "Mahaheel", best film shot in a Saudi city and special documentary, said that the film festival was highly competitive with only the crème de la crème qualifying to compete. Out of 154 submitted movies only 54 qualified.

The 2019 fifth Saudi Film Festival was the first of its kind to join the Kingdom’s Sharqiyyah Season festivities in the Eastern Province— attended by Saudi Arabia’s first and largest gathering of recreational, artistic, cultural and sporting events.

Sharqiyyah Season festival is the first of 11 scheduled festivals planned for Saudi Arabia in 2019. It features more than 80 events in Eastern Province cities, including Al-Dammam, Dhahran, Alkhobar, Al-Ahsa and Jubail

Award-winning Saudi novelist Abdo Khal, a member of the feature films’ judge panel, reviewed participating motion pictures. In his critique, he said that some films were plagued by a weak screenplay and the excessive use of backdrop soundtracks.

Apart from competing movies, the festival’s fifth edition also saw competitive screenplays with 186 works apply to be slated for the non-performing script competition, 89 qualified.



Greece to Build Escape Port on Santorini as Quakes Continue

FILE PHOTO: People board a ferry to Piraeus, during an increased seismic activity on the island of Santorini, Greece, February 4, 2025. REUTERS/Alkis Konstantinidis/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: People board a ferry to Piraeus, during an increased seismic activity on the island of Santorini, Greece, February 4, 2025. REUTERS/Alkis Konstantinidis/File Photo
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Greece to Build Escape Port on Santorini as Quakes Continue

FILE PHOTO: People board a ferry to Piraeus, during an increased seismic activity on the island of Santorini, Greece, February 4, 2025. REUTERS/Alkis Konstantinidis/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: People board a ferry to Piraeus, during an increased seismic activity on the island of Santorini, Greece, February 4, 2025. REUTERS/Alkis Konstantinidis/File Photo

Greece will soon set up an evacuation port on the island of Santorini to facilitate the safe escape of people in case a bigger quake hits the popular tourist destination, a Greek minister said on Monday.
Santorini, a volcanic island in the Aegean Sea, has been shaken by tens of thousands of mild quakes since late January, forcing thousands of people to flee, and authorities to ban construction activity, and shut schools and nearby islands.
No major damage has been reported but scientists have said the seismic activity was unprecedented even in a quake-prone country like Greece and have not ruled out bigger tremors.
They have identified the main ferry port at the foot of a precipitous slope and other sites across Santorini as weak links, although they have not said they cannot be used in an emergency situation, Reuters reported.
Civil Protection Minister Vassilis Kikilias said Greece will build an evacuation port for the safe docking of passenger ferries until a new port infrastructure is in place.
"Along with the new port in Santorini which is being prepared, there was a decision for setting up an escape port on the part of the island where passenger ferries would be able to dock in an emergency," he said in an interview with Greek ANT1 television.
Although the tremors lessened over the weekend, local authorities extended emergency measures for a third week on Sunday and reiterated calls for people to stay away from coastal areas and steep hillsides prone to landslides.
"This story is not over," Costas Papazachos, a seismology professor, and a spokesperson for the Santorini quakes told public broadcaster ERT.
"Both authorities and habitants should get used to a rather unpleasant situation for some time, it could be another two, three months."
Santorini took its current shape following one of the largest volcanic eruptions in history, around 1600 BC.
Seismologists have said the latest seismic activity, the result of moving tectonic plates and magma, has pushed subsurface layers of the island upwards.