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Maha Al-Saati

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Maha Al-Saati
مها الساعاتي
Maha Al-Saati at Fantastic Fest 2017
EducationPhD in Interactive Arts and Technology
Alma materSimon Fraser University
Occupation(s)University Professor, Filmmaker

Maha Al-Saati (also known as Maha Zeini Al-Saati,[1] Arabic: مها الساعاتي) is a Saudi Arabian female filmmaker,[2][3][4] university assistant professor[5][6] and graduate of Simon Fraser University[7][8] who has taught both in Vancouver, Canada and Saudi Arabia.[9][5] Her academic research covers the representation of architectural spaces,[8] education through the use of film,[6] and the influence of religion and culture on media.[7] She is also an alum of the TIFF filmmaker lab 2020,[10] TIFF Writers Studio 2021,[11] and recipient of the TIFF Share Her Journey award 2020.[12][13][14] She is of mixed Arab and Uzbek heritage.[15][16]

Genre & Fantasy Themes

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Al-Saati's style leans toward genre, fantasy and experimental filmmaking, using satire while being inspired by American culture, 90s MTV music videos and consumerist culture, in addition to old Warner Brothers' cartoons such as Bugs Bunny and Tom & Jerry.[15][17][4] She explores issues of religion, race and culture and her films have played in genre and fantasy festivals such as Fantastic Fest,[15][17] or in genre sections such as HollyShorts' 2020 otherworldly block[18] and the Avant-Garde and Genre section of the 2023 BAFICI (Buenos Aires International Festival of Independent Cinema).[19][20]

Her film, "Fear: Audibly" (2017) is about a girl's fear of the trumpet of doom which will end the world. The film reflects a religious period in Saudi Arabia between the 1980s and 1990s. Its dependence on sound is influenced by the Islamic restriction on visual depictions, often depending on oral narrations distributed through cassette tapes. She mentions being influenced by Slavoj Žižek's Psychoanalytic philosophy of sound as a disembodied entity floating like a ghost.[21][17]

Her film Hair: The Story of Grass (2018) is about the beauty standards regarding body hair in the Arab World. It critiques the treatment of the mentally ill, gender roles and the culture of consumerism.[22] This film has won Al-Saati the Hollywood Foreign Press Association (HFPA) residency award of 2021[23][24] and has played at Fantastic Fest[25] and Slamdance Film Festival.[26][27]

Al-Saati collaborated with American electronic opera composer Alice Shields on to compose the music for Cycle of Apples (2019).[28][29] The film was also featured by The Arab Film and Media Institute (AFMI) screening at The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.[30] The film shows her influence by classical Disney cartoons, as she traps her female protagonists on an island waiting for a prince to choose a bride. In a fantasy setting, the film takes a sinister look at these old fairytales, and addresses the gender imbalance while musing at death and the afterlife with a talking ram.[31][32] The short film was based on a 1-minute looping version titled "Eat Me: Cycle of Apples" which was featured in the TIFFxInstagram competition of 2018.[33]

Her feature film in development "A Trip to Disney" (later known as Hejj to Wonderland,[34] Pilgrim in Wonderland)[35][36][37] is about a woman who travels from Saudi to Wonderland, North America, only to find out she is abandoned by her prince.[38] Its themes explores themes of capitalism and commercialization that is disguised through fairytales. The film is told in a comedic tone, and has received development support from El Gouna Film Festival,[26] Red Sea Film Fund[34] and also featured in Nouveau Marché[36] of Festival du nouveau cinéma.[39]

Al-Saati at the Independent Spirit Awards 2022

Portrayal of Race

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Al-Saati collaborated with a number of black Saudi talents, including Saudi writer/actor Motasem Nasser, and Saudi model "Saad Mo Saud", to create a short film that explore racism in a 1980s Saudi Arabia. The short film is called "VHS Tape Replaced" (2022), and features a young black man (played by Nasser) who mimics Crown, an 80s iconic singer inspired by Prince (musician), to win the love of a girl, following an 80s romantic comedy film formula.[40][41][15][42] Nasser discusses how they explored the topic of racial bullying: “As a black young man, I understand very well what it means to be bullied by others because of your color". The choice of a musical black character "Prince" from the 80s is used with nostalgic stylistic choices to raise the awareness about race and being and being black in Saudi Arabia.[43][44][42] The film played at Palm Springs International Festival of Short Films,[45][46] Fantastic Fest Shorts with Legs competition,[47] HollyShorts Film Festival "Period Piece" section,[48] The Buenos Aires International Festival of Independent Cinema and The Red Sea International Film Festival. It stars Saudi actress Sarah Taibah,[41][49] who won The Chopard Rising Star Award for her notable work.[50][51][52] The film also features Aisha Al Rifaie (star of Faiza Ambah's film: Nour Shams (2021).[49] The film music was also composed by Austrian violinist Yury Revich.[53] The film has received an Honorable Mention at Fantastic Fest.[54][55][56][57].

The team of the film VHS Tape Replaced at the Red Sea International Film Festival 2022.

Filmography

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Year Title Role Genre Festival Screenings Awards
2016 Elo's Nest Director, writer, editor, producer Short Film Bare Bones International Film Festival[58]
2017 Fear Audibly[9] Director, writer, editor, producer Short Film Fantastic Fest, Toronto Arab Film Festival[59]
2018 Hair: The Story of Grass[22] Director, writer, editor, producer Short Film Fantastic Fest, Slamdance Film Festival, HollyShorts Film Festival, Chattanooga Film Festival[60] The Hollywood Foreign Press Association (HFPA) residency award of 2021[23]
2018 E-pidemic[61] Director, editor Episode Qomrah 3
2019 Cycle of Apples[62][63] Director, writer, editor, producer Short Film HollyShorts Film Festival, Mizna#Twin Cities Arab Film Festival, Malmö Arab Film Festival, Maskoon Fantastic Film Festival - AFLAMUNA,[64] Beirut International Women Film Festival[65]
2022 VHS Tape Replaced[66] Director, writer, editor Short Film Palm Springs International Festival of Short Films,[45] Fantastic Fest Shorts with Legs competition,[47] HollyShorts Film Festival "Period Piece" section,[48] Red Sea International Film Festival, The Aswan International Women's Film Festival,[67] The 24th Buenos Aires International Festival of Independent Cinema Avant-Garde and Genre competition.[19] [20] Honorable Mention at Fantastic Fest.[54][55][56][57].The Nahed Nasrallah Jury Award of Aswan International Women's Film Festival;[67]

The Chopard Rising Star Award for actress, Sarah Taibah.[50][51][52]

References

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  1. ^ Teodorescu, Adriana (2019-03-13). Death within the Text: Social, Philosophical and Aesthetic Approaches to Literature. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. ISBN 978-1-5275-3122-2.
  2. ^ "Creators – Studio 300". Retrieved 2020-02-28.
  3. ^ "Shields, Alice". ISCM. 2019-07-31. Retrieved 2020-02-28.
  4. ^ a b "The Decade of the Female Filmmakers of the Arab Uprisings". www.iemed.org. Retrieved 2022-12-23.
  5. ^ a b "Dr. Maha Al-Saati | Imam Abdulrahman Bin Faisal University". www.iau.edu.sa. Retrieved 2020-02-27.
  6. ^ a b Janak, Edward A.; Sourdot, Ludovic A. (2017-03-01). Educating through Popular Culture: You're Not Cool Just Because You Teach with Comics. Lexington Books. ISBN 978-1-4985-4918-9.
  7. ^ a b Teodorescu, Adriana (2019-03-13). Death within the Text: Social, Philosophical and Aesthetic Approaches to Literature. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. ISBN 978-1-5275-3122-2.
  8. ^ a b Al-Saati, Maha Zeini (2013-07-22). The architectural image: space, movement and myth (Thesis thesis). Communication, Art & Technology: School of Interactive Arts and Technology.
  9. ^ a b "Fear Audibly | Page". Birth.Movies.Death. Retrieved 2022-12-16.
  10. ^ "Industry - Fest20 - Filmmaker Lab". TIFF. Retrieved 2020-11-20.
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  33. ^ Toronto International Film Festival [@tiff_net] (2018-07-12). "Maha Al-Saati (@elosnest)'s brilliant EAT ME: CYCLE OF APPLES..." – via Instagram.
  34. ^ a b "The Red Sea Fund Opens its Fourth Cycle for Post -Production Funding – Red Sea Film". Retrieved 2022-10-23.
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  49. ^ a b Rothe2022-12-06T06:55:00+00:00, E. Nina. "Six rising Saudi filmmakers to watch". Screen. Retrieved 2022-12-12.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  50. ^ a b Dalton, Ben (2022-12-09). "Baghdad sex doll feature 'Hanging Gardens' wins top prize at Red Sea film festival". Screen. Retrieved 2022-12-19.
  51. ^ a b "RSIFF take two concludes with winning Saudi film". Arab News. 2022-12-09. Retrieved 2022-12-19.
  52. ^ a b Bedirian, Razmig (2022-12-09). "Red Sea International Film Festival announces Yusr Awards winners". The National. Retrieved 2022-12-19.
  53. ^ VHS Tape Replaced - IMDb, retrieved 2022-12-17
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  56. ^ a b "Fantastic Fest 2023". FILM REVIEW. Retrieved 2023-10-03.
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  58. ^ "Welcome to Muskogee, OK USA!". www.barebonesfilmfestival.org. Retrieved 2022-12-17.
  59. ^ "Fear: Audibly | Speculative Fiction Programme - Available Globally (Virtual Screening) | Toronto Arab Film". watch.eventive.org. Retrieved 2022-12-23.
  60. ^ "Past Festivals". Chattanooga Film Festival. Retrieved 2022-12-17.
  61. ^ قمرة٣ | #آفة_إلكترونية e pidemic الحلقة ٢٦ كاملة, retrieved 2022-12-16
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  63. ^ "Mizna Arab Film Festival 2019 | Sisters, Mothers, Friends, Lovers: A Collection of Shorts". Retrieved 2022-12-16.
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  65. ^ "Beirut International Women Film Festival". Beirut International Women Film Festival. Retrieved 2022-12-23.
  66. ^ "The Red Sea International Film Festival Unveils The Arab Shorts in Competition – Red Sea Film". redseafilmfest.com. Retrieved 2022-12-16.
  67. ^ a b "Winners announced as Aswan Int'l Women Film Festival concludes 7th edition - Screens - Arts & Culture". Ahram Online. Retrieved 2023-03-31.