Saudi Arabia’s Red Sea Fund unlocks second cycle of funding support

The Red Sea Fund encourages original ideas that embrace a rich and diverse range of subjects. (AN photo by Huda Bashatah)
Short Url
Updated 29 March 2022
Follow

Saudi Arabia’s Red Sea Fund unlocks second cycle of funding support

  • The Red Sea Fund encourages bold and original ideas that embrace a rich and diverse range of subjects to inform, educate and entertain global audiences

JEDDAH: The Red Sea Film Foundation on Monday confirmed the second cycle of the Red Sea Fund will open for submissions for features, documentaries, and animation projects from April 6-20.

The second cycle of the fund enables filmmakers from Saudi Arabia, the wider Arab region and Africa secure access to crucial funding at the early stages of crafting an idea, exploring unique stories and script development.

The recently improved year-round fund, comprising of four cycles, was adapted to handle the increasing number of submissions and will empower rising filmmakers with the support they need to create and evolve production-ready screenplays.

The Red Sea Fund encourages bold and original ideas that embrace a rich and diverse range of subjects to inform, educate and entertain global audiences.

HIGHLIGHT

The second cycle of the fund enables filmmakers from Saudi Arabia, the wider Arab region and Africa secure access to crucial funding at the early stages of crafting an idea, exploring unique stories and script development.

As the film industry in Saudi Arabia continues to thrive, the Red Sea Fund has proven to be a crucial vehicle to ensure filmmakers are in a position to make a vital contribution to champion the cultural value of storytelling in the Kingdom, and thus create a window for audiences to access authentic, untold narratives from the past, present and future.

Last year, out of the 97 awarded projects, 37 films were from the development stage, which further underlines the importance of the stage of the filmmaking process.

Fourteen Red Sea Fund films from Palestine, Jordan, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Lebanon, Qatar, Iraq, Algeria, Tunisia and Morocco were presented to packed-out film screenings at the Red Sea International Film Festival in December. With a number of the films finding their way onto the international festival circuit, this further indicates that the fund is an important force behind extraordinary features, documentaries, and animations coming out of Saudi Arabia, the Arab region and Africa.

Mohammed Al-Turki, the Red Sea International Film Festival’s committee chairman, said: “The development stage of the Red Sea Fund cycle is crucial for filmmakers with strong and exceptional stories to tell. Global streamers and studios are ramping up the volume of local content available on their platforms; the surge of Arab and African films continues to increase at international film festivals, and there is investment from international and regional production companies to shoot in the region. This is an exciting time for filmmakers.”


Saudi FM joins Arab counterparts in talks with Slovenia on Gaza, regional stability

Updated 06 February 2026
Follow

Saudi FM joins Arab counterparts in talks with Slovenia on Gaza, regional stability

  • Prince Faisal and Tanja Fajon later signed general cooperation agreement aimed at enhancing ties between Kingdom and Slovenia

LJUBLJANA: Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan held talks with Slovenia’s Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign and European Affairs Tanja Fajon in Ljubljana on Friday, as he joined Arab counterparts for an expanded meeting focused on Gaza and wider regional developments.

Prince Faisal met Fajon separately to review Saudi-Slovenian relations and explore ways to strengthen cooperation across various fields, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

The two sides later signed a general cooperation agreement aimed at enhancing ties between the Kingdom and Slovenia and intensifying joint efforts to support further progress and prosperity for both countries, SPA added.

The expanded ministerial meeting also brought together Jordanian Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi, Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty, Bahraini Foreign Minister Abdullatif Al-Zayani and Qatar’s Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Sultan Al-Muraikhi.

During the talks, ministers discussed ways to bolster regional and international security and stability, with a focus on the situation in Gaza.

They stressed the need to uphold the ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hamas, ensure its full implementation and deliver sufficient and sustainable humanitarian aid to the enclave.

The officials also reviewed efforts to advance US President Donald Trump’s peace plan and reiterated the importance of achieving a clear political horizon leading to an independent and sovereign Palestinian state along the 1967 borders, with East Jerusalem as its capital, based on the two-state solution.

They addressed developments in the occupied West Bank, calling for an end to illegal, unilateral Israeli measures and violations against Islamic and Christian holy sites in occupied Jerusalem, warning that such actions undermined de-escalation efforts.

The ministers praised Slovenia’s support for Palestinian rights and its recognition of a Palestinian state, and also discussed broader regional developments, ways to reduce escalation through dialogue, and efforts to resolve the Russia-Ukraine crisis.