Africa > North Africa > Tunisia > Tunisia: 27th Carthage film festival

Tunisia: Tunisia: 27th Carthage film festival

2016/10/30

It is the opening ceremony of the 27 th Carthage Film Festival (JCC) in Tunisia, a warm festive that always speaks of its time.

The festival which as well marks its 15th anniversary is reserved for Arab filmmakers and Africans, a period of showcasing major culture in Tunisia.

“It is the twenty-seventh edition, but we are as well celebrating the 15th anniversary. And the number is as well a return of memory. A return on how the Carthage Film Festival have seen better and worse days in term of cinematography in the Arab African region’” said Brahim letaief, Director Carthage film festival.

It is the twenty-seventh edition, but we are as well celebrating the 15th anniversary. And the number is as well a return of memory. A return on how the Carthage Film Festival have seen better and worse days in term of cinematography.

The Cinema projecting the films in competition are generally taken by assault during the festival, which will last until November 5. The festival is marked by the presence of stars like Tunisian Dorra Zarrouk and Egyptian Gamil Rateb who parade on the red carpet of the Palais des Congress at Tunis.

“There are Michel Khleifi, Idrissa Ouedraogo. There is the family of Youssef Chahine there. The players who have acted with Youssef Chahine. This is for me is a festival so back in memory. Because people with no memory is people that cannot build its next but paraden the red carpet of the Palais des Congress at Tunis” said letaief.

The official competition account for 68 films, inclunding 18 long-films part which, transaction with issues on terrorism. This year, projection which will be programmed in prisons is a race to excellence.

“There is a war as well between the festivals. A friendly war, that is to say that for having a maximum of before premieres and we work as organizers, it is as well to be able to reward this magnificent public of Arab and African at least.’‘ letaief added.

Security has been strengthened in the center of the event. Last year, during the JCC, a Tunisian suicide bomb was detonated in the presidential guard’s bus in the heart of Tunis, killing 12 of its officials.The incident occurred a few hundred meters away from the venue of the festival.

It is authentic that for decades, the influence of the national on the JCC has left its mark. Institutional leaders and actors of cultural civil society are aware of the problems and the needs of the festival and they are working together to contribute to the construction of the new Carthage Film Festival.

So it remains the majority coveted artistic event in Africa and the Arab world and the major in number of participants and movie goers.

This is a festival in need of independence and stability that will help in the decision making process in order to live up to its historical responsibilities.

50 years later, additional than ever, the question of autonomy for the Carthage Film Festival is on the schedule.

Related Articles
  • Roman "underwater ruins" discovered in Tunisia

    2017/09/10 Twenty hectares of the remains of Roman ruins under the sea have been discovered in Nabeul, Tunisia by a joint team of experts from the National Heritage Institute of Tunisia and the University of Sassari-Oristano in Italy. “We started working in Tunisia and Italy in 2010. We were searching for a port and a sub-marine that can allow us to find other remains and particularly to have the certainty that the earthquake in Neapolis really occured,” one of the mission experts said.
  • UNWTO: International tourism – strongest half-year results since 2010

    2017/09/09 Destinations worldwide welcomed 598 million international tourists in the initial six months of 2017, some 36 million additional than in the same period of 2016. At 6%, increase was well above the trend of recent years, making the current January-June period the strongest half-year since 2010. Visitor numbers reported by destinations around the world reflect strong request for international travel in the initial half of 2017, according to the new UNWTO World Tourism Barometer. Worldwide, international tourist arrivals (overnight visitors) increased by 6% compared to the same six-month period last year, well above the sustained and consistent trend of 4% or higher increase since 2010. This represents the strongest half-year in seven years.
  • H.E. President Alassane Ouattara and the theme of “Accelerating Africa’s Path to Prosperity

    2017/09/09 This year, under the leadership of H.E. President Alassane Ouattara and the theme of “Accelerating Africa’s Path to Prosperity: Growing Inclusive Economies and Jobs through Agriculture”, the African Green Revolution Forum (AGRF) 2017 is shaping up as a premier platform to showcase ongoing evolution in Africa’s agricultural transformation schedule and to scale up the political, policy, and financial commitments needed to achieve the Malabo Declaration and the world development schedule around the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Following the launch of the landmark annual Africa Agriculture Status Statement (ASSR) at the AGRF taking place in Cote d’Ivoire from 4-8 September 2017, the major conclusion centres around the power of entrepreneurs and the free market in driving Africa’s economic increase from food production. This is owing to the fact that a lot of businesses are waking up to opportunities of a rapidly growing food market in Africa that may be worth additional than $1 trillion each year by 2030 to substitute imports with high price food made in Africa.
  • International Arrivals To Africa Reach More Than 18 Million In 2017

    2017/09/09 Market Research Company Euromonitor International revealed before this week the key trends shaping travel and tourism in Africa at the 41st Annual World Tourism Conference in Kigali, Rwanda. According to Euromonitor International’s new data, international arrivals to Africa grew by 6.5 % in 2017, to reach 18,550 million, up from 16,351 million in 2012. Key markets such as South Africa, Kenya, Nigeria, Mozambique, Cameroon, Mauritius and Tanzania accounted for 70 % of international trips to the Sub-Saharan African region.
  • Roman ruins discovered underwater off Tunisia

    2017/09/02 Vast underwater Roman ruins have been discovered off northeast Tunisia, apparently confirming a theory that the city of Neapolis was half submerged by a tsunami in the 4th century AD.Underwater expedition has found streets, monuments and around 100 tanks used to produce fermented fish-based condiment popular in ancient Rome. "It's a major discovery," Mounir Fantar, the chief of a Tunisian-Italian archaeological mission which made the find off the coast of Nabeul, said. He said an underwater expedition had found streets, monuments and around 100 tanks used to produce garum, a fermented fish-based condiment that was a favourite of ancient Rome.