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Home / Arts and Entertainment / Cairo Fest: "Dead Dog" Captures Arab Film Award

Cairo Fest: "Dead Dog" Captures Arab Film Award

22 Nov

•

Summary

  • "Dead Dog" won best Arabic film at the Cairo Film Festival.
  • Actress Chirine Karameh made a powerful comeback, winning best actress.
  • The film explores emotional distance rooted in Lebanese emigration.
Cairo Fest: "Dead Dog" Captures Arab Film Award

Lebanese director Sarah Francis's intimate marital drama, "Dead Dog," earned the Saad Eldin Wahba Award for best Arabic film at the Cairo Film Festival. Actress Chirine Karameh, making a notable return to acting, was honored with the best actress award for her performance. The film, produced by Placeless Films, navigates the complexities of a relationship fractured by the pervasive reality of emigration.

The narrative centers on a couple, Aida and Walid, exploring their emotional distance over four days in a semi-abandoned mountain house. Francis, transitioning from hybrid and documentary work, found fiction allowed for intricate world-building, yet retained a documentary-like responsiveness to the actors' contributions and immediate circumstances.

Francis emphasized the film's focus on the emotional space created by emigration rather than the act itself, exploring themes of displacement and uncertainty. The support from institutions like the Doha Film Institute and Red Sea Film Fund was crucial for the film's realization, fostering a sense of regional cinematic community.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
"Dead Dog" is a Lebanese drama exploring the emotional distance and fractured intimacy of a couple impacted by emigration, set against a backdrop of instability.
Director Sarah Francis's film "Dead Dog" won best Arabic film, and lead actress Chirine Karameh received the best actress award.
Emigration shapes the characters' feelings of displacement and uncertainty, creating an emotional space central to the film's exploration of relationships.

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