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

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

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.



Christopher Reeve’s Children Want to Honor His Honesty in 'Super/Man' Film

Christopher Reeve and wife Dana pose at The Christopher Reeve Paralysis Foundation 13th Annual "A Magical Evening" Gala in New York in this photo taken on November 24, 2003. (Reuters)
Christopher Reeve and wife Dana pose at The Christopher Reeve Paralysis Foundation 13th Annual "A Magical Evening" Gala in New York in this photo taken on November 24, 2003. (Reuters)
TT

Christopher Reeve’s Children Want to Honor His Honesty in 'Super/Man' Film

Christopher Reeve and wife Dana pose at The Christopher Reeve Paralysis Foundation 13th Annual "A Magical Evening" Gala in New York in this photo taken on November 24, 2003. (Reuters)
Christopher Reeve and wife Dana pose at The Christopher Reeve Paralysis Foundation 13th Annual "A Magical Evening" Gala in New York in this photo taken on November 24, 2003. (Reuters)

What makes a hero? "Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story" seeks to address that question by looking at the life of the late actor who once played the Man of Steel but was paralyzed following a horse-riding accident.

The documentary, released in UK cinemas on Friday, charts Reeve's rise to stardom thanks to the 1978 film "Superman" as well as his activism and quest to find a cure for spinal cord injury after becoming a quadriplegic.

It features interviews with his three children, Matthew, Alexandra and William, and a rich archive of home footage before and after the avid sportsman's 1995 accident, showing both tender moments as well as more challenging times.

Reeve, who starred in four "Superman" films and other movies, died in 2004 of heart failure, aged 52. His wife Dana died 17 months later of lung cancer. She was 44.

"It was a huge leap of faith, we decided to sit for interviews and hand over our films and trust that (the directors) would do justice to our dad and Dana’s story, which they did," Alexandra Reeve told Reuters.

"But it’s also a total gift. We sat there in the screening room (after first seeing the film)... and I remember the lights coming up at the end and... one of the first things I said was: ‘You just gave us two hours with our parents again.’"

Reeve's children and co-directors Ian Bonhote and Peter Ettedgui said the film seeks to strike a balance, showing both Reeve's strengths and weaknesses. He is heard talking about his struggles with fame and life after his accident.

"He was always honest and he was always very open and candid ... after the accident, he was very forthright about... any medical setbacks, about his hopes for research in the future," Matthew Reeve said, adding the film wanted to "honor that aspect of his honesty".

Christopher and Dana Reeve campaigned heavily to advocate for people living with paralysis and their carers, raise awareness and fund research.

“My father and mother placed very little, if any, weight on fame or public success. They cared most about the health and love within a family," Will Reeve said.

"They didn’t see themselves as anything more than two human beings just trying get through life as best they could."