THE CINEMA RIF
Antonia Carver
from BIDOUN Fall 2004
Cinematheque de Tanger: arthouse film amid B-grade Bollywood
From Cairo's coffee shops to Dubai's hotel bars, Middle Eastern
cinephiles have one complaint: the lack of arthouse cinemas, or indeed
any venue screening non-commercial fare. Artist Yto Barrada plans to
change all that--in Tangier at least--with the opening of the Cinematheque
de Tanger (CDT) in the former Rif Cinema, a glorious 1940s building that
sits at the tip of the Grand Socco and currently boasts a run of
Bollywood B-movies. CDT's artistic director and programmer, Barrada will
open the CDT in spring 2005 with a program that spans Middle Eastern,
European, Latin American, and North American features, documentaries,
shorts, children's pictures, and animation. The CDT will act as a
"permanent film festival"; Barrada's plans include retrospectives of
work by directors such as Elia Suleiman, Yousry Nasrallah, Abbas
Kiarostami, and Chris Marker, plus Sunday documentaries, a film club,
and monthly programs of shorts.
While the cinema seats around 450, the square outside the Grand Socco
can accommodate ten times that number, allowing for open-air screenings
of classic films. In addition, the center will house an editing suite
and screening room, and future plans include the distribution of new
films. Barrada hopes the CDT will introduce local audiences to national
and world cinema; along the way, she says, perhaps the project will go
some way to slowing Moroccan youth's slip into "unemployment, boredom
and solipsism." Bidoun caught up with her in Tangier.
Bidoun: Presumably the CDT project is in part inspired by the irony
inherent in recent Moroccan cinema--that the country has increasingly
been used as a destination to shoot international and local films, yet
cinemas are closing every month, and there are few opportunities to see
homegrown films.
Yto Barrada: Yes, this paradox is one of our
motivations. The film funding law in Morocco has changed recently--it's
now based on the French model, and part of the money made on foreign
shoots is being reinvested in the local film industry. In addition, the
government has stated its desire to fuel the energy around films and
locations. But most films shot in Morocco are never shown here and the
technicians, actors, and so on, never see their work. There are around
five to ten films made every year, but within the cinemas, there's the
usual hegemony of Hollywood and Bollywood movies. Some distributors do
show Moroccan films, but only the easy, populist comedies. (Yet in the
past five to six years, people have begun to demand to see features that
might present a critical view of life.) And of course there's no space
for shorts and documentaries, let alone experimental cinema. We're going
to show one short before every feature, and include experimental film
and video, especially work by young Moroccans--both expatriates and
locals, we make no distinction.
You've mentioned that you're "inviting the world back to Tangier"--what
will be the balance between world cinema and Moroccan cinema?
We're
linking up with the Centre Cinematographique Marocain's archive in
Rabat, which has a great collection of Moroccan films and films shot in
Morocco. We will also follow up all films shot in Morocco, good or bad,
so as to encourage debate. There are no film schools here, so the
history of cinema is also vitally important--we can learn from the
classics.
This issue of Bidoun focuses on the politics and practicalities of
archive. Could you tell me a little more about the documentary
collection and CDT's archive? Is there anything to compare with
this--either in the Arab world or internationally?
At the moment, we're
collecting for the documentary archive, building a library of films,
digitizing the films, and planning to make them available for members.
We're also collecting amateur and professional films, to build an
historical archive. The Centre Cinematographique Marocain has an amazing
collection on 35mm--even the news was shot on 35mm! This dates back to
colonial times, through independence and beyond. We're also collecting
amateur film--little treasures on super-eight of events, weddings, and so
on--which people are donating. There will be a context--we're going to
include a library of books and magazines, to create a critical space,
and encourage cinema-goers to be demanding. My model here is the Dublin
Film Institute (sharp, accessible, minimal bureaucracy) or the Jerusalem
Cinematheque. I used to go there when I was living in Ramallah in the
early 1990s, so I know the work they do is great. I still have some
considerable fundraising to do--we want this to be a serious cinema, and
digital projectors and the shipping of prints are expensive, but we'll
take it step by step.
Distributors in the Middle East tend to have a limited, commercial view
of their audiences, and maintain that the viewing public is not
interested in arthouse or non-commercial cinema. Is Morocco ready for
CDT?
I have the opportunity to show 'alternative' and local cinema
because the center is non-profit. We'll have four to five films a day,
with every morning devoted to documentaries and Friday afternoons for
Arab cinema (just like in the old days, when Egyptian films always
played on TV on Fridays). In Tangier, we're about twelve kilometers away
from Europe, yet the borders are closed to Moroccans, and increasingly,
people are becoming closed in on themselves. But if we can't go out, we
can still have a window on the world. Compared to Paris, or anywhere in
Europe, young people here are hungry for information, obsessed with
politics, with a strong desire to discover things. But the political
space is saturated, and it's only within culture that we have space to
tackle issues, to encourage debate. We speak Spanish, yet have no
cultural links with Latin America; we're part of Africa, yet have no
links there; and even vis-a-vis Europe, we need to develop links in a
more profound way, beyond tourism and business. The screenings will be
cheap for members--this isn't just a center for the Lycee Francais or the
American School. In a way I'm lucky--there's no concert hall or theater
here any more, the cine-clubs have gone, and yet there's a population of
around one million people, so I know Tangier is more than ready. The
city deserves a permanent arthouse cinema (like many of us were
privileged to grow up with, and that changed our lives). We're aiming
for a modest space but with pleasure, good coffee, clean toilets, great
sound, and excellent technology. Voila!
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