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This book consists of an account of the creation of the Palestine
Film Unit (PFU) and its founding members, from the photography
department in the early years of the Palestinian revolution
(1967-1968), to its evolution in the mid-1970’s into
the Palestinian Cinema Institution. Khadijeh
Habashneh weaves her own memories into excerpts from letters and
other communications of survivors, friends and PFU family members,
with writings by scholars who analyzed the work and the
contributions of this remarkable film movement (from the late
1960’s to early 1980’s). As such it offers a unique perspective
on this aspect of Palestine film history that ended in the loss of
its archive in the mid 1980’s, providing details that have not
been previously published in English.
This book provides an in-depth and intimate study of the cinema of
Muhammad Malas. One of the well-known auteurs of Arab and Syrian
cinema, Malas's distinctive cinematic project has always confronted
the social and political issues of his time. From feature films
Dreams of the City, The Night, Bab al Maqam (Passion), and Ladder
to Damascus to documentaries such as The Dream and Aleppo: Maqamat
of Pleasure, Malas's films challenge and explore Arab culture and
history. Archival images run through the chapters of this book
which combines insightful interviews with excerpts from Malas's
literary works and critical explorations of his cinematic style and
thematic concerns. The book concludes with Malas's own words,
sharing the treatment of his film project Cinema al-Dunya.
In 1980, Syrian filmmaker Mohammad Malas traveled to Lebanon to
film a documentary of interviews with Palestinians of the refugee
camps around Beirut about their dreams. The Dream: A Diary of the
Film is Malas's haunting chronicle of his immersion in the life of
the camps, including Shatila, Burj al-Barajneh, Nahr al-Bared, and
Ein al-Helweh. It also describes the filmmaking process, from the
research stage to the film's unofficial release, in Shatila Camp,
before it reached a global audience. In vivid and poetic detail,
Malas provides a snapshot of Palestinian refugees at a critical
juncture of Lebanon's bloody civil war, and at the height of the
PLO's power in Lebanon before the 1982 Israeli invasion and the
PLO's subsequent expulsion. Malas probes his subjects' dreams and
existential fears with an artist's acute sensitivity, revealing the
extent to which the wounds and contingencies of Palestinian
statelessness are woven into the tapestry of a fragmented Arab
nationalism. Although he halted his work on the film in 1982,
following the massacres of Sabra and Shatila, he completed it in
1987, turning 400 interviews into 23 dreams and 45 minutes of
screen time. Both diary and film present these people somewhere
between present and past tense, but they are preserved forever in
the word, magnetic tape, and now in digital code. The Dream is
essential reading for anyone interested in the history of the
Palestinians in the modern Middle East, and for students and
scholars of Arab filmmaking, politics, and literature.
Global Horror: Hybridity and Alterity in Transnational Horror Film
is an anthology textbook that challenges students to reconsider
horror films through the lenses of transnational cinema, evolving
technologies, and decolonial approaches to the genre. As such, the
book aims to increase our awareness of horror film histories across
vast geographies while examining existential questions about
difference, war, and the future of life on this planet. This
textbook is divided into two parts, organized by theme and
geographic range. Part One includes six reprinted essays speaking
on established subjects-German Expressionism, vampires, zombies,
science fiction, and more-from established modes of horror film
scholarship, including feminist scholarship and critique of
Blaxploitation horror. Part Two includes two reprinted essays on
J-horror and Korean horror film and six chapters of original
writing that explore understudied areas of the genre, including
Middle Eastern horror film, Indian horror film, Latin American
horror film, and Indigenous (North American) horror film. A timely
and complex exploration of the genre through the lens of
contemporary social issues, Global Horror is an ideal textbook for
courses and programs in film and cinema studies.
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