Palestinian Kamel al-Basha Wins Top Acting Prize at Venice Film Festival

Palestinian actor Kamel al-Basha holds aloft the Volpi Cup for best actor for his role in 'The Insult' during the award ceremony at the 74th Venice Film Festival. (AP)
Palestinian actor Kamel al-Basha holds aloft the Volpi Cup for best actor for his role in 'The Insult' during the award ceremony at the 74th Venice Film Festival. (AP)
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Palestinian Kamel al-Basha Wins Top Acting Prize at Venice Film Festival

Palestinian actor Kamel al-Basha holds aloft the Volpi Cup for best actor for his role in 'The Insult' during the award ceremony at the 74th Venice Film Festival. (AP)
Palestinian actor Kamel al-Basha holds aloft the Volpi Cup for best actor for his role in 'The Insult' during the award ceremony at the 74th Venice Film Festival. (AP)

Palestinian actor Kamel al-Basha won the top acting prize at the 74th edition of the Venice Film Festival on Saturday.

He earned the prize for the Lebanese film, “The Insult,” which also stars Lebanon’s Adel Karam.

The fact that this is the movie’s only award is an indication that it was discussed thoroughly by the jury, chaired by actress Annette Bening, before granting Basha the festival’s top acting honor.

The Golden Lion was awarded to critics’ favorite “The Shape of Water,” a dark fantasy directed by Mexico’s Guillermo del Toro and starring Sally Hawkins.

A trial is the common factor between three films that were in competition at the Venice festival, two of which earned prizes. The movies are Lebanon’s “The Insult”, France’s “Custody,” and Japan’s “The Third Murder.” The Lebanese movie was undoubtedly the best because it managed to avoid being political while addressing a strictly political issue.

The film focuses on two victims, each of whom claims that they were the victim of the other. The first is a Lebanese man, played by Karam, who is influenced by hateful sectarianism directed against Palestinians, believing that the entire system in Lebanon works for them and not the Lebanese people. The second is a Palestinian, played by Basha, who works for a municipal company when the Lebanese man dumps a bucket of water on him and then insults him. The rest of the movie depicts the ensuing trial between Karam and Basha’s characters.

Perhaps the prize went to Basha, who is a professional theater actor living in Jerusalem, because he deserves it for being Palestinian. This is likely because the Israeli film “Foxtrot”, which criticizes the Israeli military, won the festival’s Grand Jury Prize. The Venice jury and its chair, Bening, was mainly comprised of left-leaning members, which also fell in Basha’s favor. This does not undermine his acting achievement, which is fully deserved as he expressed the quiet despair endured while living in Lebanon.

Karam, in contrast, is an open book from the onset of the movie. This is not his fault as it would be difficult to portray him as a gray character given the negative values he stands for. Director Ziad Douery succeeded in allowing the audience to feel some empathy towards the character.

Given its film festival success, it seems likely that Lebanon will submit “The Insult” as a nominee for the Best Foreign Film category at next year’s Academy Awards. It remains to be seen if it will be selected from among the several dozen films that will be submitted from around the world.



South Korean President Takes up Golf Again to Forge a Bond with Trump

South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol arrives for a news conference at the Presidential Office in Seoul, South Korea, 07 November 2024. (EPA)
South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol arrives for a news conference at the Presidential Office in Seoul, South Korea, 07 November 2024. (EPA)
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South Korean President Takes up Golf Again to Forge a Bond with Trump

South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol arrives for a news conference at the Presidential Office in Seoul, South Korea, 07 November 2024. (EPA)
South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol arrives for a news conference at the Presidential Office in Seoul, South Korea, 07 November 2024. (EPA)

South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol has dusted off his golf clubs in an attempt to forge a bond with President-elect Donald Trump, an avid lover of the game.

The presidential office said Tuesday that Yoon began practicing the game for the first time in eight years in preparation for a possible round of golf with Trump.

Since his election, Trump’s "America first" approach has raised concerns it could negatively affect the US defense commitment to South Korea and hurt the trade interests of the Northeast Asian country in various ways, including increased tariffs.

Some experts say it’s important to build a close personal friendship with Trump during the transition period before he formally takes office in January.

"Much could depend on whether Yoon is able to strike up positive chemistry with Trump immediately during the transition and foster a close personal friendship to convince him to want to support and advance Seoul’s interests," said Duyeon Kim, a senior analyst at the Center for a New American Security in Washington.

Yoon and Trump discussed strengthening bilateral cooperation and agreed to hold an in-person meeting soon during a phone call on Thursday. The South Korean president told reporters later that while things couldn't remain the same as under the Biden administration, "we have been preparing to hedge these risks for a long time."

And apparently, a game of golf may be what's needed.

Local media said Yoon went to a Seoul golf course on Saturday, but the presidential office said it couldn't confirm the reports.

A senior presidential official, speaking on condition of anonymity in a background briefing, said that while he didn’t know how hard Yoon practiced golf, training was necessary as "our president also has to hit a ball properly to get conversations going on" with Trump, who has "outstanding" golf skills.

Yoon isn’t the first world leader to try to use golf to develop relations with Trump.

When he was in office, Japan’s assassinated prime minister, Shinzo Abe, struck up a personal friendship with then-President Trump, on the greens of golf clubs both in Japan and the US. In 2017, Abe said that a round of golf with Trump was a good chance to relax and discuss difficult issues.