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Cannes: "The West understands nothing about Islam", according to Swedish director Tarik Saleh

2022-05-21T15:10:17.084Z


The filmmaker presented to festival-goers Boy from Heaven, a politico-religious thriller inspired by the Name of the Rose and set around the Islamic University of al-Azhar, in Cairo.


"

The West is both obsessed with Islam and at the same time, it does not understand this religion at all ," director Tarik Saleh, whose film

Boy from Heaven

is in the running for

the film, told AFP on Saturday.

Golden Palm.

If the feature film has no educational aim, it documents with precision different doctrines of Sunni Islam.

And offers viewers a glimpse, from the inside, of a little known or even depreciated world.

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Boy from Heaven

: wave to Islam

“I really think that the West understands nothing about Islam

,” insists the man who explains that he has a

“personal”

relationship to this religion.

Almost five years after the release of

Confidential Cairo

, the 50-year-old Swedish filmmaker, born to an Egyptian father, is back with a politico-religious thriller that denounces the authoritarian excesses of Marshal al-Sissi's power and offers a deep dive in the world of Sunni Islam.

A dive that is reminiscent

of The Name of the Rose

, Umberto Eco's novel and then successful film, taking place in an abbey in the Middle Ages.

Mere coincidence?

"I was re-reading this book when I asked myself: 'What if I told a story like this but in a Muslim context?'"

, recalls Tarik Saleh to AFP.

A love letter to Cairo

Like

The Confidential Cairo

, which had been filmed in Morocco,

Boy from Heaven

could not be filmed in Egypt, but in Turkey.

“I haven't been back to Egypt since 2015, when we were filming

Confidential Cairo

when Egyptian security services ordered us to leave the country.

Since then, I have been an undesirable person who, if he sets foot on Egyptian soil, will no doubt be arrested,”

he assures us.

The one who discovered his father's country at the age of 10 explains that he holds a special place in his life:

"I love the Egyptians, their language... When I hear it, it's like music to me.

Even if my level of Arabic is catastrophic!

“, he quips.

Moreover, anchoring one's films in this country is a way of

“reappropriating”

it .

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Fiction and not documentary, the film also has a strong autobiographical scope:

"Like the main character, my grandfather is from a small fishing village and studied at

al-Azhar University

",

indicates Tarik Saleh in reference to the main religious institution in the Sunni world, located in the historic center of Cairo.

"In a way

, he continues,

this film is a love letter to Egypt and a tribute to my grandparents."

However, Tarik Saleh has not always been a director.

He started his career as a street artist, before turning to documentaries.

In 2005, the documentary he produced on the Guantanamo military prison won awards in the United States and Europe.

"I hate being a director,

" he said seriously when AFP asked him about his vocation as a filmmaker.

I come from the world of art and painting and I like to be alone.

I hate being with 200 people on a film set.

Even if I like the cinema, it is always very painful for me”.

And to confide that he sees himself more as

"a writer".

Like a Harlan Coben or a John Grisham, two masters of thrillers, the filmmaker nourishes each of his scenarios with never-ending plots

.

“Each time I am told to simplify because otherwise no one will be able to follow”.

"In addition to being my best friend, for me, he is an incredible director and screenwriter,"

told AFP his favorite actor, Fares Fares.

Source: lefigaro

All news articles on 2022-05-21

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