Arab Cinema Mourns Death of Renowned Kuwaiti Director Khaled Al-Siddiq

 Kuwaiti Film Director Khaled Al-Siddiq
Kuwaiti Film Director Khaled Al-Siddiq
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Arab Cinema Mourns Death of Renowned Kuwaiti Director Khaled Al-Siddiq

 Kuwaiti Film Director Khaled Al-Siddiq
Kuwaiti Film Director Khaled Al-Siddiq

Kuwait on Thursday announced the passing away of film director Khaled Al-Siddiq, the pioneer of the Kuwaiti cinema, and the director of the first Kuwaiti feature film Cruel Sea, which was released in 1972 and nominated for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 45th Academy Awards.

The National Council for Culture, Arts and Letters mourned “with great sadness and sorrow (...) the pioneer of the Kuwaiti cinematic movement, artist and film director Khaled Al-Siddiq, who passed away at the age of 76 after a rich career in the field of film and television art.”

Dr. Issa Al-Ansari, Assistant Secretary-General for the Culture Sector, and the official spokesman for the Council, said in a press statement on Thursday: “We are saddened by the news of the death of the great film director Khaled Al-Siddiq, the maker of pioneering cinematic and television works that left their mark in this field at the local, Arab and international levels.”

Al-Siddiq has made important cinematic achievements in the history of cinema in Kuwait. He released several critically acclaimed features throughout his career, including The Wedding of Zein in 1976, adapted from the novel by Tayeb Salih, and Shaheen in 1986, based on the novel by Italian writer Giovanni Boccaccio, a joint production between Kuwait, India and Italy.

Al-Siddiq studied in Kuwait, then moved to India, where he discovered his passion for cinema. Before completing his high school studies there, he joined a film institute in Bombay, where he received a training in photography and met with film stars and Indian and international directors.

He began his introduction to filmmaking volunteering at film studios in India. He also trained in filmmaking in Italy, the United Kingdom, and the United States. He made his first short film in 1965, called Alia and Esam. Other shorts followed, all of which he independently financed and often acted in.

After his graduation, he worked for Kuwait TV in 1963 and then moved to TV directing, relying on self-training.

Al-Siddiq received many awards and honors, especially for his movie Cruel Sea, including the first prize at the Youth Film Festival in Damascus (1972), the Honor Award at the First Tehran International Film Festival, the International Film Critics Award at the Venice Film Festival, and the second prize at the Ohio International Festival, in addition to several prizes from festivals and film forums in Chicago, Spain, Carthage and others. His movie The Wedding of Zein won seven International awards.



Director Steve McQueen Shows War through Child’s Eyes in New Film ‘Blitz’

 This image released by Apple TV+ shows Saoirse Ronan, left, and Elliott Heffernan in a scene from "Blitz." (Apple TV+ via AP)
This image released by Apple TV+ shows Saoirse Ronan, left, and Elliott Heffernan in a scene from "Blitz." (Apple TV+ via AP)
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Director Steve McQueen Shows War through Child’s Eyes in New Film ‘Blitz’

 This image released by Apple TV+ shows Saoirse Ronan, left, and Elliott Heffernan in a scene from "Blitz." (Apple TV+ via AP)
This image released by Apple TV+ shows Saoirse Ronan, left, and Elliott Heffernan in a scene from "Blitz." (Apple TV+ via AP)

Oscar winner Steve McQueen had long wanted to make a movie about the Blitz - Germany's wartime aerial bombing of British cities - but it was seeing a photo of a Black boy waiting to be evacuated that inspired him to explore the theme through a child's eyes.

His film "Blitz" is based on thorough research and true events, the British director of "12 Years a Slave" and "Hunger" told Reuters in an interview.

While researching another project, he came across the photo of the boy at a train station - one of hundreds of thousands of British children to be evacuated from towns and cities during World War Two.

The film stars Saoirse Ronan as Rita, a Londoner who sends her son George, played by newcomer Elliott Heffernan, to the countryside for safety during the war. But George is determined to return home despite the dangers ahead.

Many of the characters and events George encounters are based on extensive research and documented by author Joshua Levine, who joined the project as a historical adviser, said McQueen.

"I thought, 'you've got to get it right'," McQueen said.

"In fact, the research sort of just propelled me and inspired me to the story and George's odyssey through London at that time. It was exciting because you found all these characters, all these facts, which most people unfortunately didn't know, and you want to sort of illuminate them on screen."

The Blitz - from the German word Blitzkrieg, or "lightning war" - lasted from Sept. 1940 until May 1941. For Britons it conjures up images of Londoners huddling in underground shelters and rallying to battle blazes and rescue people from the rubble.

McQueen said he had discovered a diverse, "quite cosmopolitan" London through his research.

"There was a large Chinese community and there was a Black presence. There was all kinds of presence here in London. I wasn't trying to push some kind of narrative. It was just what one found within the sort of everyday of London," he said.

Like George, 11-year-old Heffernan embarked on a transformative journey with the movie.

"It was a big adventure being on my first film, seeing how films are made and going out on different locations," said Heffernan, who was nine at the time of shooting.

The movie also proved new territory for four-time Oscar-nominee Ronan, who spent months working with a vocal coach to prepare for scenes which see her singing live.

"It's the kind of thing I've always been terrified to do in front of everyone, but I've always wanted to do it," Ronan, 30, told Reuters.

"It was incredible to see how strong you can become at something that you're just not a professional at after a few months. It gave me a lot of confidence."

"Blitz" is out in select cinemas on Nov. 1 and will stream on Apple TV+ from Nov. 22.