Abu Bakr Shawky talks ‘Hajjan,’ his Saudi Arabia-set film debuting in Toronto this month 

Egyptian director Abu Bakr Shawky (left) directs his first Saudi film, “Hajjan.” (Supplied)
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Updated 31 August 2023
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Abu Bakr Shawky talks ‘Hajjan,’ his Saudi Arabia-set film debuting in Toronto this month 

  • ‘This is a Saudi film, but it’s so universal,’ says the Egyptian filmmaker

DUBAI: The seeds for our most brilliant ideas can be planted when we least suspect it. For Egyptian director Abu Bakr Shawky, that moment came years ago, as he sat around a Bedouin campfire under the bright stars of the Arabian desert. That night, just as they had for thousands of years, men shared accounts of their lives, folktales passed between generations, legends of ancestors long gone. Those stories have now inspired Shawky’s excellent first Saudi film, “Hajjan,” set to premiere this month at the Toronto International Film Festival.  

“I heard these fantastical stories about a camel racing faster than the wind, a boy putting on a magical jacket, a snake with two heads… They stayed with me. I knew I had to turn them into a movie someday,” Shawky tells Arab News. 

 

 

It wasn’t until Shawky was having lunch in 2021 with renowned producer Moh Hefzy (“Feathers,” “Perfect Strangers,” “Sheikh Jackson”), with whom he made his acclaimed 2018 Cannes Palme d’Or-nominee “Yomeddine,” that those stories came rushing back. Hefzy had called to meet him about an idea: What if we made a film about a boy and a camel in Saudi Arabia? It didn’t click at first. Then, one suggestion unlocked the right door in his mind.  

“‘A boy and his camel’ was too arbitrary for me — there’s a million ways that could go, and I couldn’t see it,” Shawky says. “Then the phrase ‘camel racing’ was mentioned, and then I started paying closer attention. That is such a specific world, and there’s so much I didn’t know about it — so much I wanted to know. I was, like, ‘Hold on, I think we have something.’  

“What attracts me is a world I don’t yet understand — usually, a world that cinema hasn’t yet explored. With ‘Yomeddine,’ that was the world of the leper colony, which unlocked a whole microcosm of things that happen parallel to the rest of our lives. Camel racing, too, has this rich history, but it hasn’t been discussed from a filmic perspective, and I just had to find out more,” he continues.  




Filmmaker Abu Bakr Shawky on the set of ‘Hajjan.’ (Supplied)

In “Hajjan” (Arabic for ‘jockey’), Shawky takes that beautifully simple idea that had originated from Abdulla Al-Rashid, director of Ithra (which financed the film), and turns it into a story for the ages: A young boy named Matar sits around the campfire, hearing tales like those Shawky once heard, including one about his own grandfather, a legendary camel jockey. After a tragedy at the next day’s race, Matar and his beloved camel Hofira, which he saved from certain death as a newborn, are forced to live up to that legend — or fall into the clutches of a sadistic benefactor named Jasser. 

“This is a Saudi film — it’s a Saudi cast and all Saudi locations — but it’s so universal. The deeper we got into exploring this world, the more I found themes that are at the heart of great global storytelling; ideas of vengeance, of love, of running away from your problems and finding your destiny. I didn’t grow up in Saudi, but I challenged myself, immersed myself in this culture, and I’m so proud of what we created,” says Shawky. 

Throughout his career, Shawky has been driven by the heart of an explorer, wanting to try his hand at different genres and topics. He tried out different avenues with his shorts, experimenting with domestic melodrama, political commentary and history. Each of those different experiences ultimately helped him become a seemingly overnight success with “Yomeddine,” which bypassed the regular first-time filmmaker slots at Cannes and instead put him in direct competition with legendary filmmakers Jean-Luc Godard, Spike Lee and Hirokazu Kore-eda. 

“Success in filmmaking never really comes overnight — it’s always years of failures and trial and error, and that’s what I went through, too,” says Shawky. “In those 10 years of doing short films, some were good, some were bad, but I tried different things to see what I could do.” 

 

 

Growing up, Shawky’s first love was music. Trained as a classical pianist, he practiced every day, thinking that would be his future while film remained a quiet respite on the side.  

“We didn’t get the latest releases in Egypt, so what I had was lots of VHS tapes for older films — classics from the Forties and Fifties, Westerns and film noir. I’d be watching James Dean stuff over and over again from a young age, and it really became an attachment for me. That’s the era of film that I always gravitate towards,” says Shawky. 

It’s no wonder, then, that Shawky was taken with Saudi Arabia, as he explored the Kingdom’s northwest in search of a place to film ‘Hajjan.” The story, which also draws from the classic Westerns he used to watch as a kid, needed the same sort of mythic landscape that brings those battles between good and evil to life — that makes tall tales feel believable. That’s what he found in NEOM.  

“Those steep cliffs evoke so much history. Millions of years ago this all used to be underwater, and you can see that in the landscape — it makes it very unique. That backdrop becomes a character in and of itself. It’s stunning, yes, but it’s also genuinely intriguing. It’s really magnificent to walk around and feel like you’re a part of something bigger,” he says.  

While Shawky loves trying new things and taking in new locales, each experience often leaves him yearning for more, sometimes years later. Just as the campfire stories later inspired “Hajjan,” it was his experience making a short documentary 10 years earlier that inspired “Yomeddine.” Similarly, a short film he made 10 years ago about a family caught in the throes of history refused to leave his mind after he finished it. That will serve as the inspiration for his next feature, “The 67nd Summer,” for which he’s in the final stages of gathering funding.  

“It’s a family portrait set in Sixties Egypt, and I couldn’t be more excited. It’s funny, as I never wanted to make a feature about it; I wanted it to be a short. Then somehow, years later, you find you’re still hung up on something, and the story is not fully told, and you want to make a film about it,” says Shawky. 

 

 

Similarly, “Hajjan” is unlikely to be his final experience in the Kingdom. Each new lesson he learned planted new interests he’d like to explore down the road, with so many Saudi stories left to be told. 

“I’m so grateful that they approached me for this. This was such a good experience and I gained so much from this country. For me, what I need to find next is another world like camel racing, but there’s no shortage of stories or perspectives,” Shawky says. “What’s fascinating for me, just as a fan of cinema, is that there’s just so many brilliant new voices in Saudi cinema with stories to tell. I can’t wait to see what comes out of that, and I’d love to be a part of it when I can.” 


Mini op-ed: Recognising a shift in how people relate to wellness, self-care

Updated 05 March 2026
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Mini op-ed: Recognising a shift in how people relate to wellness, self-care

DUBAI: I have spent nearly a decade working in the beauty industry in Saudi Arabia and the UAE, and Ramadan always has a way of prompting change; in habits, in priorities, and in the routines people have been carrying without question. Speaking from my own corner of the industry, one of these habits is often hair removal.

Saudi Arabia’s beauty and personal care market was valued at about $7.56 billion in 2025 and is set to grow to an estimated $8.03 billion in 2026. Within that growth, personal care encompassing the daily (sometimes unglamorous) routines hold the largest share. But market size alone does not tell the full story. A study conducted at King Abdulaziz University Hospital, Jeddah, found that three quarters of Saudi women experienced complications from temporary hair removal methods, including skin irritation, in-grown hairs and hyperpigmentation. A separate 2025 study published in the Majmaah Journal of Health Sciences found that laser hair removal was both the most considered and most commonly undergone cosmetic procedure among Saudi respondents, yet dissatisfaction with cosmetic procedure outcomes was reported by nearly half of all participants. The numbers point to a gap not in demand, but in results. 

When I launched a specialized electrolysis practice in the UAE in 2016, it was with a clear gap in mind; safe, regulated, permanent hair removal for the region’s specific needs. The range of hair types here and the prevalence of conditions such as polycystic ovary syndrome, or PCOS, demanded a method that works across all of them.  Electrolysis is the only method recognized by the US Food and Drug Administration and American Marketing Association as achieving true permanent results, regardless of hair color or type. 

Despite this, awareness in Saudi Arabia remains limited. Part of this is familiarity, laser has dominated the conversation for years, and electrolysis, which requires more sessions and a licensed electrologist’s precision, has struggled to break through. Part of it is education. Many clients who come to us have never heard of electrolysis; they come because they have exhausted everything else. 

Right now, Saudi Arabia is in the middle of a genuine transformation in how people relate to wellness and self-care. The beauty market is maturing, consumers are asking harder questions of the brands they choose and Vision 2030 has not just shaped the economy, it has shaped how Saudis are showing up in their own lives. In that context, the idea of choosing permanence over repetition lands differently.
 
Mariela Marcantetti is a beauty industry entrepreneur based between Saudi Arabia and the UAE.