Cannes Film Festival adds titles to 2023 line-up, including work by French Moroccan director

French Moroccan director Mona Achache will screen her film “Little Girl Blue” at the Cannes Film Festival. (Supplied)
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Updated 25 April 2023
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Cannes Film Festival adds titles to 2023 line-up, including work by French Moroccan director

DUBAI: The Cannes Film Festival on Monday announced new additions to the Official Selection of its 76th edition, running May 16-27, including a title by French Moroccan director Mona Achache.  

Two new films have been added to the Competition line-up: Jean-Stephane Sauvaire’s “Black Flies” and Catherine Corsini’s “Le Retour.”  

The Cannes Premiere section sees new additions as well with Mexican director Amat Escalante’s “Lost In The Night,” French director Valerie Donzelli’s “Just The Two Of Us,” and Argentinian director Lisandro Alonso’s “Eureka.”  

In the Special Screenings section, French Moroccan filmmaker Mona Achache’s “Little Girl Blue,” Afghan director Sahra Mani’s “Bread and Roses” and French Swedish director Anna Novion’s “La Theoreme de Marguerite” have been added.  

Out of Competition screenings will also include Frederic Tellier’s biopic “L’Abbe Pierre – Une Vie de Combats.”   

Two more titles have been added to Un Certain Regard: Chinese director Wei Shujun’s “Only The River Flows” and French director Alex Lutz’s “Une Nuit.”   

The Midnight Screening line-up features Robert Rodriguez’s “Hypnotic” and Kim Tae-gon’s “Project Silence.”  

 Rodriguez’s sci-action thriller “Hypnotic” stars Ben Affleck, Alice Braga, J.D. Pardo, Hala Finley and Dayo Okeniyi.  


At Jazan festival, Suad Al-Asiri paints memory, land and leadership

Updated 13 January 2026
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At Jazan festival, Suad Al-Asiri paints memory, land and leadership

  • Local artist channels personal hardship into works that reflect Jazan’s identity, heritage
  • Jazan: A Nation and a Prince, places region at the heart of a composition featuring Prince Mohammed bin Abdulaziz and Prince Nasser bin Mohammed bin Abdullah bin Jalawi

RIYADH: At the Ahad Al-Masarihah pavilion at Jazan Festival 2026, Suad Al-Asiri’s paintings blend memory, place and personal history, offering visual narratives shaped by beauty and hardship. 

A novelist and visual artist, Al-Asiri has long used art as a storytelling tool. After a near-fatal car accident in March 2024, her work took on a new urgency. Bedridden for 11 months, cut off from the public world for more than a year, she describes that period as one of the most painful in her life — yet also transformative. 

“First of all, praise be to God for granting me life, as the accident was extremely severe,” she said. “By God’s grace, I was given a new life. All my thinking after the accident was about becoming an inspiration to others — about enduring pain and obstacles, and still leaving an impact.” 

Her return to public life came in 2025, when she participated in National Day celebrations with the ministry of interior. By the time she arrived at Jazan Festival, she was ready to channel that experience into her art. 

The centerpiece of her display, “Jazan: A Nation and a Prince,” places the region at the heart of a composition featuring Prince Mohammed bin Abdulaziz and Prince Nasser bin Mohammed bin Abdullah bin Jalawi, governor and deputy governor of Jazan respectively. 

Visitors linger over the details: the painting incorporates coffee beans, sesame and khudair — materials drawn from local products.

“I wanted people to recognize these products immediately,” she said. “They are part of Jazan’s daily life, and using them makes the work more tangible, more connected to everyday experience.” 

The painting sparks conversation. Visitors discuss leadership, identity, and the intimate relationship between people and their environment. 

Beyond the central piece, Al-Asiri presents individual portraits of the two princes, expanding the dialogue into a broader exploration of heritage and memory.  

Her journey into art is tied to her life as a storyteller. Early experiments with charcoal and pencil evolved into abstract art, drawn by its expressive freedom. 

From there, she explored realism, surrealism, and eventually modern art, particularly pop art, which has earned her wide recognition in artistic circles. Her novels and media work complement her visual practice, earning her the title “the comprehensive artist” from the governor.

Yet what stands out most in this exhibition is how Al-Asiri’s personal resilience flows through each piece. Her experience of surviving a devastating accident, enduring months of immobility, and returning to the public eye informs every brushstroke. 

Visitors sense not just her artistic skill, but her determination to turn life’s hardships into inspiration for others. 

Walking through the pavilion, one can see it in the way she blends heritage symbols, southern landscapes, and scenes of daily life. 

Each painting becomes both a document and a dialogue — a celebration of Jazan’s culture, a reflection on identity, and a testament to the power of human perseverance. 

At Jazan Festival 2026, Suad Al-Asiri’s art is a quiet, persistent inspiration for anyone who pauses long enough to listen.