Saudi Arabia’s Red Sea Film Festival announces films for ‘Next Generation’ section

Besides the Arab premiere screenings, the festival will present a wide variety of activities and events, aimed at including younger festival goers. (Supplied)
Short Url
Updated 17 November 2021
Follow

Saudi Arabia’s Red Sea Film Festival announces films for ‘Next Generation’ section

DUBAI: The inaugural Red Sea International Film Festival, set to take place from Dec. 6-15, announced on Wednesday the five feature films and selection of shorts that will be presented as part of its Red Sea: Next Generation section.

The movies will feature productions created for younger audiences, shining a spotlight on animation films, dramas and documentaries from all around the world. 

Besides the Arab premiere screenings, the festival will present a wide variety of activities and events, aimed at including younger festival goers.

The artistic director Edouard Waintrop said in a statement: “We are proud to put such a strong focus on young people’s cinema at the festival. It is so important to us at the RedSeaIFF to remain inclusive of young people, given that these young people will undoubtedly play a crucial role in shaping the burgeoning Saudi film industry as it progresses into the future.”

The event will see the Arab premiere of Illumination’s highly anticipated animated feature “Sing 2,” written and directed by award-winning British director Garth Jennings. 

This film sees Buster Moon, voiced by Matthew McConaughey, and his performers preparing to launch a stage extravaganza. It stars Reese Witherspoon, Scarlett Johansson, Tori Kelly, Taron Egerton and many more. 

Spanish director Manuel Calvo will present his directorial debut “Champions” starring Saudi actors Fatima El-Banawy and Yasser Sagaf. Arrogant and easily riled, Khaled is assistant coach of a top Saudi football team. A show of temper after a match lands him in disciplinary court, and condemned to the worst punishment for his inflated ego: community service coaching a team of players with intellectual disabilities.

“Belle: The Dragon and the Freckled Princess,” written and directed by Academy Award-nominated Mamoru Hosoda, will have its Arab premiere at the festival. 

The anime feature tells the story of high school student Suzu, who lives with her father in a Japanese village. She discovers U, a virtual world where everyone’s avatar reflects their secret strengths.

In her second feature documentary, “Bigger Than Us,” French director Flore Vasseur focuses on a generation rising to fix the world. In the film, Melati, an 18-year-old girl, fights the plastic pollution ravaging her home, Indonesia, for six years. 

She travels the globe to meet others like her: a volunteer with Refugee Rescue in Lesbos, a young Ugandan campaigning for a ban on underage marriages, and an 18-year-old refugee, who founded a school in Lebanon. 

“Kiddomania” is a selection of short animated films from directors Nicolas Deveaux, Benjamin Flouw, Remy Dupont, Paulin Cointot, Paul Emile Boucher, Gaspard Roche, Patrick Jean, Evalds Lacis, Paul Bush, Eric Montchaud and Antoine Robert. 

The screening will also be accompanied by games.

The closing night of the festival will see the world premiere of award-winning Egyptian writer and director Amr Salama’s latest feature “Bara El Manhag.” It tells the story of Nour, a 13-year-old orphan living in the countryside in the early 1980s, who is a compulsive liar with vision problems. 

To gain the respect of his fellow classmates, he ventures inside a haunted house where he finds a solitary old man who’s hiding from the world. A friendship is born between the boy and the old man, initiating a journey of self-discovery. 


Jessica Kahawaty to narrate London concert paying tribute to Arab music icons

Updated 24 February 2026
Follow

Jessica Kahawaty to narrate London concert paying tribute to Arab music icons

DUBAI: Australian Lebanese model and entrepreneur Jessica Kahawaty this week announced that she will serve as the storyteller for “A Night With The Legends,” a one-night musical tribute celebrating iconic women of Arabic music, taking place at London’s Royal Albert Hall on March 5.

Kahawaty will portray Scheherazade and deliver spoken narration during the program.

The evening will pay tribute to the legacies of Umm Kulthum, Fairuz, Warda, Sabah, Asmahan and Layla Mourad.

Vocals will be performed by Lebanese vocalist Abeer Nehme, accompanied by the UK-based London Arab Orchestra under the direction of conductor Basel Saleh, alongside the London-based Royal Philharmonic Concert Orchestra. The program will also feature a 70-member all-female choir.

“I’m incredibly humbled,” Kahawaty wrote to her 1.8 million followers on Instagram. “As storyteller, I’ll be weaving history, memory and meaning into the musical experience in a one-night tribute celebrating the iconic women of the golden era of Arabic music.”

“I cannot wait to see you all there,” she added.

Kahawaty is also an entrepreneur. She co-founded fine jewelry label Kahawaty Jewels with her father, master jeweler Ghassan Kahawaty, launching the Dubai-based brand last year as a continuation of the family’s longstanding craftsmanship tradition.

“I grew up watching my father in his jewelry trade. I saw how happy he made people when he created these beautiful pieces,” Kahawaty previously told Arab News. “I’ve always wanted to continue my father’s legacy and my grandfather’s trade. I felt like this is the perfect time to launch Kahawaty Jewels in Dubai, which is a city I’ve been in for over 13 years.”

Kahawaty and her mother are also behind UAE-based food delivery business Mama Rita. In July last year, the pair expanded the venture with the launch of a cookbook, which featured a cover endorsement from Hollywood actress and producer Courteney Cox.

Writing on Instagram at the time, Kahawaty said: “The moment we held the Mama Rita cookbook in our hands for the very first time … after two years of pouring our hearts into it. And we’re beyond thrilled to share a special surprise on the cover — a quote from the one and only (Courteney Cox). Her iconic role as Monica in ‘Friends’ — the talented chef, perfectionist and loving control freak — mirrors so much of the dynamic between mum and me. And her true persona is even more beautiful, warm and generous.”