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The Foreign Language Film Award Committee oversees the process and reviews all the submitted films. Following this, they vote via secret ballot to determine the five nominees for the award. [ 3 ] Below is a list of the films that have been submitted by Israel for review by AMPAS for the Foreign Film Oscar along with the year of the submission ...
The film was selected to be screened in the Un Certain Regard section of the 74th Cannes Film Festival, [11] where it had its world premiere on 10 July 2021. [12] The film was theatrically released in Israel by Lev Cinemas on 17 March 2022. [13] It was released in France by Pyramide Distribution on 13 April 2022. [14]
Al-Arab, a pan-Arab newspaper based in London Alarab News Channel , an Arabic-language news channel Kul al-Arab (website alarab.com), Israeli Arabic-language weekly newspaper
Among the most prominent films of this period: Beyond the Walls (Uri Barbash), Summer of Aviya (Gila Almagor), Avanti Popolo , Late Summer Blues (Renen Schorr), Noa at 17 (Itzhak Zepel Yeshurun), Hamsin (Danny Waxman), Shtei Etzbaot Mi'Tzidon and Burning Land (Serge Ankri).
According to film critic and historian Roy Armes, Lebanese cinema is the only other cinema in the Arabic-speaking region that could amount to a national cinema. [40] While Egyptian and Lebanese films have a long history of production, most other Arab countries did not witness film production until after independence.
Kul al-Arab (Arabic: كل العرب, meaning All of the Arabs) is an Israeli Arabic-language weekly newspaper, founded in 1987. [1] Based in Nazareth, the paper is Israel's most influential and widely read Arabic-language periodical. [2] [3] It is also distributed in the West Bank. [2] Kul al-Arab has 70 employees and a circulation of 38,000. [1]
The Al-Arab media organization also helped fund Ahval, a news website launched by Yavuz Baydar, a Turkish journalist who left Turkey following the 2016 Turkish coup d'état attempt. Qantara.de suspects Al-Arab and the government of the United Arab Emirates of influencing the creation of Ahval's Arabic language service. [3]
The film was declared haram by the mayor of Umm al-Fahm, the conservative Arab home town of the character Nour. [8] A fatwa was issued against the director, Maysaloun Hamoud, who is a Palestinian born in Hungary but now resident in Jaffa. [19] The film is rated R16 in New Zealand for violence, sexual violence, drug use and offensive language.