Wed 9 Nov 22
A new book by Professor Shohini Chaudhuri has challenged stereotypes about Middle Eastern filmmaking by showing how constraints in the region inspire creativity, offering lessons for filmmakers around the world.
focuses on filmmaking since 2009, a period during which the Middle East has been rocked by multiple crises, from street protests to violent state crackdown, civil wars and currency devaluation.
By exploring how filmmakers such as , , and have overcome such obstacles, as well as constraints around financing, production and distribution, Professor Chaudhuri offers lessons for filmmakers producing movies in times of crisis.
Professor Chaudhuri, from the Department of Literature, Film, and Theatre Studies, explains how curating an earlier season of films inspired the book: 鈥淚 realised there鈥檚 an astonishing cinematic vibrancy in the Middle East, despite being the world鈥檚 so-called crisis hotspot and worst region for freedom of expression. I wanted to grapple with the paradox of creative constraints 鈥 how independent filmmakers in Iran and the Arab world manage to produce their creative works despite or indeed because of the restrictions they face.鈥
The book offered Professor Chaudhuri the chance to explore constraints beyond state censorship and how obstacles can even be beneficial when they are transformed into creative opportunities.
鈥淯nderstanding the constraints is essential for having a more nuanced perspective and breaking some of the stereotypes in which filmmaking from the region is enshrouded. These filmmakers鈥 experiences can be inspiring and empowering for other filmmakers because of the agency they demonstrate in the face of obstacles,鈥 she said.
鈥淣ew constraints can arise and dramatically transform the filmmaking landscape, as shown by the COVID-19 pandemic. As our constraints and conditions change, we can learn from the innovative approaches fostered by filmmakers in the Middle East,鈥 Professor Chaudhuri added.
The book, which was made possible by a Leverhulme Trust Fellowship, offers nine creative strategies for producing work under conditions of crisis. One is the use of science fiction: 鈥淔ilmmakers in the region have made use of the 鈥榝ound鈥 dystopias on their doorsteps to reflect on unfolding realities and transcend expectations that they are only dealing with 鈥榣ocal鈥 concerns through the 鈥榰niversal鈥 genre of science fiction,鈥 Professor Chaudhuri explained.
鈥 short film Submarine (2016), filmed during Lebanon鈥檚 trash crisis when garbage was piling up on the streets and flowing into rivers makes creative use of this found dystopia by incorporating real locations into its science fiction story,鈥 she added.
Other strategies include using non-professional child actors in real locations where gender segregation creates barriers for adult actors, using animation in place of missing footage or where anonymity is required, and using archive footage to uncover forgotten or untold stories.
鈥淒espite the many types of obstacles that filmmakers from the Middle East confront, they show extraordinary resourcefulness: finding ways to work within or around these limitations. Their inventiveness provides lessons for all filmmakers,鈥 said Professor Chaudhuri.
Header image: Still from Tehran: City of Love (2018), courtesy of Here and There Productions