No ticket? No problem ... for Saudi film fans, the long wait is over

A mime artist at the entrance of the AMC cinema in Riyadh. Cinemas in the capital have been sold out for months, but more are coming there and to Jeddah. (AFP)
Updated 09 September 2018
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No ticket? No problem ... for Saudi film fans, the long wait is over

  • After a summer of sold-out screenings at the two cinemas in Riyadh, more theaters are on their way
  • Saudi Arabia ended a 35-year ban on cinemas this year

DUBAI: With Riyadh movie-goers still facing sold-out screenings at the only two cinemas in Saudi Arabia after last April’s opening, movie operators granted admission to Gulf’s biggest market are preparing to feed their insatiable appetite for film.

Fans have flocked to the box-office since the first two theaters opened to the public in Riyadh, and not just to action movies. According to VOX, the region’s largest cinema operator, among the obvious big-screen hits, “Avengers: Infinity War” and “Black Panther,” have been the science fiction movies “Rampage,” starring Dwayne Johnson, and “A Quiet Place”, starring Emily Blunt, as well as the musical sequel “Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again.”

“There is a huge demand for entertainment in Saudi,” said Cameron Mitchell, CEO of Majid Al-Futtaim Cinemas, of which VOX Cinemas is a subsidiary. “The market is massive and full of opportunities as the population is young and enthusiastic about cinema and movies.”

As well as the blockbuster hits, Mitchell revealed that the first Bollywood movie to screen in Saudi Arabia, “Gold,” a historical drama about India’s hockey team at the 1948 Olympics, also attracted a host of fans to the box office.

But what can we expect before the end of 2018 as movie operators look to cash in on huge projected box-office returns?

Mitchell spoke with Arab News about his company’s plans over the next year, including the launch of a new cinema for residents in Jeddah within the next few months. 

He said the Kingdom will form half of its overall revenues in the Middle East over the next five years as it unveils plans to open 80 new screens over the next 12 months.

Within months of Saudi Arabia formally ending a 35-year long ban on cinemas, three cinema operation licenses was awarded to operate in the Kingdom; the first was to AMC Theatres, an American chain owned and operated by Wanda Group, which opened the Kingdom’s first cinema on April 18 and plans to open 40 across Saudi Arabia over the next five years. Shortly after, the second license was awarded to VOX. 

In July, it was announced the third license had been awarded to the Al-Rashed United Group — Empire Cinema, which plans to build 30 theaters in the country over the next three years. And last month, a fourth license was awarded to Lux Entertainment Co., which plans to open 300 cinemas across the Kingdom within five years.

Mitchell says the previously untapped market spells out a huge business opportunity for VOX. “Our plan is to roll out 600 screens across Saudi Arabia during the next five years and more than 600 screens by 2023,” he outlined. “This is the same amount of screens as our regional footprint combined.”

Majid Al-Futtaim will invest SR2 billion to open the 600 screens and will provide 3,000 jobs in the next five years to help achieve the goals of the Kingdom’s Vision 2030 when it comes to diversifying the economy and local production.

While Mitchell said he cannot disclose how much VOX anticipates to generate in cinema revenue on a yearly basis as it rolls out its expansion plans, he did say the Kingdom now forms an integral part of its business in the Middle East.

“Our estimate is that Saudi will form 50 percent of our business, and the return on our investment is likely to take the least amount of time, hopefully months as opposed to years,” he said. “We know the region; we serve Saudi guests through our offerings in other countries, so we know what will appeal to them.”

Majid Al-Futtaim opened it first four-screen movie theater in the Kingdom in Riyadh Park Mall as part of the largest Magic Planet Family Entertainment Center in the region in April. Mitchell said two more theatres will soon follow.

“We have announced the opening of our first multiplex in Red Sea Mall, Jeddah by the end of 2018,” he said. “This will include the largest IMAX screen in KSA and 12 screens of our signature experiences.

“We have also unveiled plans for our integrated cinema multiplex in Riyadh Front scheduled to open in 2019. By Q1 2019, our plan is to have nearly 80 screens in Saudi. This will boost employment opportunities for Saudis and continue to attract movie fans across KSA. We will be announcing our plans in due course with more information on the locations across the Kingdom.”

The Riyadh Front multiplex, which will be the largest in the Kingdom, will include VOX Cinemas’ signature experiences to the Kingdom, including the mega-screen Max, Kids and the luxury cinema concept Theatre by Rhodes, which means movie-lovers in Saudi Arabia will soon have the option of enjoying their favorite blockbusters while dining on an exclusive menu created by Michelin-starred chef Gary Rhodes.

With 35 cinema complexes in eight countries in the Mena region, VOX Cinemas is already well known to Saudi movie fans, said Mitchell.

“We know what will appeal to Saudi audiences as we have been welcoming them for many years in our Bahrain, UAE and other regional locations. Saudi has huge opportunities and is expected to become a significant box office market, worth $1 billion (SR3.75 billion).

“Saudi is one of the largest markets and is very promising. Saudi is not only a market for cinema, but also a place to drive wider businesses and encourage Saudi and GCC talent. Hence, it will contribute to the economy as well as the culture in Saudi.”

Majid Al-Futtaim plans to invest SR16 billion ($4.2 billion) across its portfolio of shopping malls, fashion, leisure and retail projects in the Kingdom, and this latest project is expected to create more than 117,000 direct and indirect job opportunities, as the VOX Cinemas investment alone will see the company open 600 screens in the next five years in Saudi Arabia.

The company has a considerable and expanding presence in Saudi Arabia with more than SR14 billion invested in current and announced projects across retail, leisure and fashion, creating more than 114,000 direct and indirect job opportunities.

“In addition, VOX Cinemas is investing an additional SR2 billion to open 600 screens in the next five years. In total, Majid Al-Futtaim has committed SR16 billion. This is an indication of the opportunities we see in Saudi.”

Movie-goers will also soon see new screen options from AMC, which was awarded the first license of its kind by the Saudi Ministry of Culture and Information to operate cinemas in the Kingdom.

Together with the Development and Investment Entertainment Company, the wholly owned subsidiary of the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia (PIF), AMC plans to open around 40 cinemas in 15 cities in Saudi Arabia over the next five years and between 50 to 100 cinemas in about 25 cities by 2030. 

AMC’s first movie theatre opened in Riyadh on April 18. 

Adam Aron, CEO of AMC, previously said the company is following the creative movement of development projects in the Kingdom to open new economic sectors.

“We are looking forward to providing entertainment services that will enable everyone to spend an enjoyable time playing world-class film shows across the Kingdom,” he said. 


Digital wellbeing summit at Ithra to confront technology’s dangers, advantages

Updated 20 May 2024
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Digital wellbeing summit at Ithra to confront technology’s dangers, advantages

  • Event at Ithra will have over 110 digital experts, 70 speakers from 20 countries

DHAHRAN: After a two-year hiatus, the second Sync Digital Wellbeing Summit 2024 returns to the King Abdulaziz Center for World Culture, or Ithra, this week for discussions and debates by world-leading experts.

Scheduled for May 22 and 23, Ithra will be buzzing with all things that merge technology and wellness, and will feature 110 digital experts and 70 speakers from 20 countries.

The second Sync Summit is scheduled for may 22 and 23, and Ithra will be buzzing with all things that merge technology and wellness. (Supplied)

“The Sync Summit 2024 is not just another conference. It’s a platform for meaningful discussions, critical reflections, and collective actions for a better digital future,” said Wadha Al-Nafjan, head of digital wellbeing at Sync. “As we navigate the digital paradox, it is vital to recognize our responsibility in shaping the world we want to live in.”

Topics including algorithmic homogenization and identity loss, AI’s impact on the creative industries, and misinformation will be tackled under the theme “Confronting the Digital Paradox.”

The second Sync Summit is scheduled for may 22 and 23, and Ithra will be buzzing with all things that merge technology and wellness. (Supplied)

The summit will be held at the Ithra headquarters in Dhahran, with a live stream available.

Day one, organized around the sub-theme “Cuts Both Ways: Wrestling with the Tensions of the Digital Era,” includes seven panels, two fireside chats and two keynote talks.

It’s a platform for meaningful discussions, critical reflections, and collective actions for a better digital future.

Wadha Al-Nafjan, Head of digital wellbeing at Sync

Day two, centering on the sub-theme “A Digital Renaissance: Shaping Our Relationship with Digital for a Better Future,” will have eight panels and three keynotes. In addition, it will have the Sync Spotlight series finale, for which creative influencer Omar Farooq will screen his new documentary, “The Dark Side of Japan.”

Although there was no summit last year at Ithra, the Sync team conducted extensive research globally that led to some compelling findings.

Wadha Al-Nafjan, Head of digital wellbeing at Sync

According to their research, 81 percent of those surveyed are concerned about the unsolicited collection of their personal data, 53 percent struggle to maintain boundaries between their work and personal lives, while 66 percent believe that the internet needs more regulation. About 73 percent of participants think social media was designed to be addictive.

Furthermore, the average time spent online daily has gone down, compared with 2021. About 68 percent claim to understand AI, 87 percent think technology is allowing people to work and study more flexibly, and 91 percent use digital devices to access resources including books and tutorials.

The second Sync Summit is scheduled for may 22 and 23, and Ithra will be buzzing with all things that merge technology and wellness. (Supplied)

“Never before has the world been so connected to everything and everyone. We know technology has improved our lives, but it also has the painful potential to distract and harm,” Ithra said in a statement to Arab News. The summit’s activities are geared toward “ensuring that we as humans come together to keep digital technology in check and working towards the greater good, safeguarding its future, and our own.”

The event will bridge the gap between academic research, industry practices, and end-users regarding digital wellbeing through a variety of sessions.

Sync Spotlight

A series of sessions will run in parallel to the two-day Sync Summit stage program, offering greater interaction between speakers and audience members.

Sync Action Forum

The worldwide Gen Alpha Forum, an initiative developed by Sync Research with McCann Worldgroup, will see the community expand to include Saudi Arabia parents of Gen Alpha children, as well as educators, and other Gen Alpha stakeholders.

Majlis

In partnership with Johns Hopkins, which has a local hospital at Aramco, the Majlis will host three sessions exploring digital wellbeing with educators, researchers and students.

The Plaza

The gamified experience will dive into the findings compiled by the Sync Research team through the lens of three projects which were developed with partners Horizon Group, PSB and McCann Worldgroup.

Sync Immersive

In this interactive journey, the organizers promise to provide a three-step experience designed to impact participants’ emotions and understanding, while guiding them into navigating the complexities of digital ethics.

Podcast

The booth experience will serve both as a studio to record live podcast episodes hosted by Mo Gawdat, formerly of Google, and as a multi-functional space for hosting media interviews. Saudi Arabia’s Mohammed Islam, host of the English-language podcast, The Mo Show, will also be present.

Other notable speakers this year include US data scientist and AI specialist Rumman Chowdhury; Saudi Arabia athlete, FIFA World Champion and owner of an esports team, Abdulaziz Alshehri; and Apple Inc. co-founder Steve Wozniak.

One May 21, Ithra will host the Global Digital Wellbeing Assembly, a gathering of experts from across the Kingdom and the globe to discuss the guiding objectives and roadmap for a new digital wellbeing society.

Registration is now open and attendance is free.

 


Saudi artistry blooms in floral sculptures

Sara Abdullah’s two art collections, Alstroemeria (2024) and Anemone (2023), are each dedicated to the spotlighted flower.
Updated 20 May 2024
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Saudi artistry blooms in floral sculptures

  • To the artist, nature signifies creativity, inspiration and deep magical meaning, she told Arab News

RIYADH: Saudi artist Sara Abdullah’s delicate floral sculptures find inspiration in the nuances and harmony between humanity and nature.

To the artist, nature signifies creativity, inspiration and deep magical meaning, she told Arab News.

“Both (art and nature) are means of exploring the deeper aspects of the human existence. As artists, we can capture and express the intangible aspects of our lives that defy simple verbal descriptions,” she said.

Sara Abdullah’s two art collections, Alstroemeria (2024) and Anemone (2023), are each dedicated to the spotlighted flower. (Supplied)

Abdullah credits her artistry to her role model, her father, who introduced her to a multifaceted world of art at a young age.

“My story is like my dad’s — we started by painting characters and self-portraits but eventually transitioned to creating nature artwork,” she said.

“My father’s deep love for art and trying to convey his artistic message to the world is what makes me continue to search more for the deep meaning between art and nature and how to transform my ideas into a valuable work of art that includes a purposeful message that touches people.”

Sara Abdullah’s two art collections, Alstroemeria (2024) and Anemone (2023), are each dedicated to the spotlighted flower. (Supplied)

Her two art collections, Alstroemeria (2024) and Anemone (2023), are each dedicated to the spotlighted flower.

In the Alstroemeria collection, her sculptures begin with the design of the wood base, which is curved to reflect the feeling of containment and support.

She handcrafts pieces of the flower with twisted and connected edges, representing the petals from the beginning of their life until their flowering.

“Its distinction lies in its longevity among the flowers, and this is what adds to the true meaning of the artwork, which is connection, stability, love, friendship … feelings and bonds that are established after a long period of relationship,” the artist explained.

The message of the artwork is the “close connections and depth of feelings between people and the ability to support and contain each other as we go through life’s experiences.”

Abdullah describes her Anemone collection as “nature embodied in abstract sculptures … a harmonious dance between light and shadow.”

The wildflower has long inspired artists and storytellers, appearing in various works of Arabic literature, including in poems, stories and folk tales.

Anemone flowers generally grow open and wide, with a dark center.

Through this collection of sculptural works, Abdullah embodies the feeling of joy accompanied with dancing.

“When something happy happens in your life, then you start dancing as if you seem to be dancing lightly in the open air and you feel that you are open to the world due to the influence of this happiness. This simile reflects when you see the cold and light wind between the flowers, making them sway between each other lightly,” she said.

“When I prepare to create an art collection, I always try to choose pastel colors that are calm and comfortable to look at as natural colors, in addition to using materials to highlight some pieces or lines in the painting, which adds a three-dimensional touch to the artwork.”

Abdullah also described her outlook on life: “Try to deal with life as if you are like a flower that grows in its beautiful shape … and no matter how the wind blows on her at the end, she blooms beautifully again. Be always like flowers bloom.”

 

 


Saudi FM expresses Kingdom’s solidarity with Iran after helicopter crash

Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan spoke with Iran’s acting Foreign Minister Ali Bagheri Kani on Monday.
Updated 20 May 2024
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Saudi FM expresses Kingdom’s solidarity with Iran after helicopter crash

  • Iranian president, foreign minister and seven others died when the aircraft they were traveling in went down on Sunday in a remote area of northwestern Iran

RIYADH: Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan expressed the Kingdom’s solidarity with Iran and its people following the death of President Ebrahim Raisi and Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian in a helicopter crash on Sunday. 

During a phone call with Iran’s acting Foreign Minister Ali Bagheri Kani on Monday, Prince Faisal expressed his condolences over the deaths of the president and his accompanying delegation.

Raisi, 63, his foreign minister and seven others died when the aircraft he was traveling in went down on Sunday in a remote area of northwestern Iran, where the wreckage was only found on Monday morning.


267,657 pilgrims have arrived so far in Saudi Arabia ahead of Hajj

Updated 20 May 2024
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267,657 pilgrims have arrived so far in Saudi Arabia ahead of Hajj

  • This year’s Hajj, for the Hijri year 1445, is expected to begin on June 14 and conclude on June 19

RIYADH: As of May 19, 267,657 pilgrims had arrived in Saudi Arabia via air, land and sea ahead of Hajj, according to the General Directorate of Passports.
The directorate said it is using all of its resources to ensure entry procedures for pilgrims at all arrival points run as smoothly as possible by providing platforms that use the latest technical advances and fully trained staff proficient in many languages, the Saudi Press Agency reported.
This year’s Hajj, for the Hijri year 1445, is expected to begin on June 14 and conclude on June 19. Flights carrying pilgrims began to arrive in the Kingdom on May 9.


Saudi Libraries Commission expands Culture House network to Asir region

Updated 20 May 2024
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Saudi Libraries Commission expands Culture House network to Asir region

  • Culture Houses are part of the Quality of Life Program, an initiative under Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030

RIYADH: The Libraries Commission recently inaugurated a Culture House in the Ahad Rafidah Governorate, Asir region.

This follows a comprehensive renovation and upgrade of the public library, transforming it into a cultural hub for the area. The launch event was attended by the commission’s CEO, Dr. Abdulrahman Al-Asim.

The program aims to develop cultural infrastructure, enhance cultural sites, and improve public libraries. (SPA)

Al-Asim told the Saudi Press Agency that the project aims to fulfill the needs and aspirations of visitors, from its architectural design and facilities to the annual schedule of events. He noted that each Culture House in the Kingdom has a clear plan for sustainability and activation, offering acultural activities for all community segments, including children, adolescents, writers, intellectuals and artists.

According to SPA, since its soft opening four months ago, the Culture House in Ahad Rafidah has attracted nearly 30,000 visitors.

The Culture House has learning spaces, a children’s theater, a main theater, and a library with designated reading areas. It also includes spaces for innovation and technology. The facility offers several amenities, such as prayer rooms for men and women, meeting rooms, a printing and computer center, a cafe, and a shop.

Culture Houses are part of the Quality of Life Program, an initiative under Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030. The program aims to develop cultural infrastructure, enhance cultural sites, and improve public libraries, thereby contributing to the Kingdom’s cultural and artistic advancement in line with the goals of Vision 2030.