Gigi Hadid opens Jacquemus show in France

The model wore a textured cream-colored coat adorned with exaggerated curved sleeves. (Getty Images)
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Updated 30 January 2024
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Gigi Hadid opens Jacquemus show in France

DUBAI: US Dutch Palestinian model Gigi Hadid is back on the runway. 

The catwalk star opened French label Jacquemus’s show in Saint-Paul-De-Vence, France, donning a textured cream-colored coat adorned with exaggerated curved sleeves. The coat was layered over a crisp, white-collared shirt.

Accentuating her silhouette, the coat was cinched at the waist with a wide belt boasting a gold buckle. The model also showed off a coordinating leather handbag and white bow-embellished slingbacks.




The catwalk star opened French label Jacquemus’s show in Saint-Paul-De-Vence, France. (Getty Images)

With this collection, Simon Porte Jacquemus – the maison’s head designer – sought to move past recent turbulence in his business with a glamorous show in front of stars including Julia Roberts and Kylie Jenner.

Held among the post-modernist artworks of the Maeght Foundation, it was a more sober and elegant collection than his previous sunny shows in the region’s lavender fields or the salt marshes of the Camargue.

There were no more than three colors on display on the models: Black and white, with recurring flashes of bright red.

The collection, titled “Sculptures,” mixed simple, elegant designs with touches of surrealism like exaggerated sleeves and rounded shoulders, or waistlines and collars jutting out to the side.




Julia Roberts attended the show. (Getty Images)

There were references to the artists around the room: A leather jacket inspired by one belonging to sculptor Alberto Giacometti and a bag following the curves of Henry Moore, for example.

An ecstatic-looking Roberts declared it all “stunning” when asked by AFP — about as much as celebrities tend to give on the sidelines of fashion shows.

Reality TV star and entrepreneur Jenner was also present, alongside five-year-old daughter Stormi.

This is not the first time Hadid has walked for Jacquemus. 

In June 2023, she walked the “Le Chouchou” fashion show at Chateau de Versailles in France wearing a sheer lace ensemble, while in January 2020, she showed off a backless, beige dress complete with thin straps at the shoulders and elegant rouching on one hip during Paris Men’s Fashion Week. 

Launched in 2009, the independent label has seen rapid growth thanks in large part to the founder’s canny social media presence — all smiles and warmth, in contrast to the icy elitism of many of his peers.


Akio Fujimoto discusses RSIFF Golden Yusr winner ‘Lost Land’ 

Akio Fujimoto at the Red Sea International Film Festival in Jeddah. (Getty Images)
Updated 19 December 2025
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Akio Fujimoto discusses RSIFF Golden Yusr winner ‘Lost Land’ 

  • The Japanese filmmaker on his groundbreaking Rohingya-language feature

JEDDAH: Some stories demand to be told. Not just as narratives, but as acts of witness.  

Japanese filmmaker Akio Fujimoto’s “Lost Land” is one such story. Billed as the first feature film in the Rohingya language, the movie took home the top prize — the Golden Yusr — at this year’s Red Sea International Film Festival. 

“Lost Land” — which premiered in the Horizons section at this year’s Venice Film Festival, where it won the special jury prize — follows two young Rohingya siblings, Somira and Shafi, fleeing persecution in Myanmar as they undertake a perilous journey d to join their uncle in Malaysia. 

Shomira Rias Uddin (R) and Muhammad Shofik Rias Uddin in 'Lost Land.' (Supplied) 

Presenting the Golden Yusr to Fujimoto, RSIFF jury head, the US filmmaker Sean Baker, said the film “confronts the plight of displaced children with unflinching empathy and poetic urgency.” 

Fujimoto’s journey to this film is a profound narrative of personal reckoning. Having worked in Myanmar for more than a decade, he recognized the unspoken tensions surrounding discussions about refugee experiences but never spoke out himself due to fear of persecution. The 2021 military coup in Myanmar, he said, forced him to confront a lingering sense of guilt about his previous silence on the subject. 

“Looking back on my decade of work, I realized I had been avoiding topics I wanted to focus on as a filmmaker,” Fujimoto said in an interview with Arab News at RSIFF. 

That self-reflection became the catalyst for “Lost Land,” transforming personal hesitation into a powerful act of cinematic storytelling. 

Eschewing traditional casting methods, Fujimoto discovered his lead actors through serendipity during community fieldwork. Shomira Rias Uddin and Muhammad Shofik Rias Uddin, real-life siblings who play the film’s young leads, were found walking near interview locations, compelling the filmmaker to reshape the entire script around their natural chemistry. While the original script was written with two teenage brothers in mind, the discovery of the Rias Uddin siblings led Fujimoto to alter the script significantly. 

Communication between the cast and crew became an intricate dance of translation and cultural bridge-building. With Fujimoto speaking primarily Japanese and some Burmese, the team relied on Sujauddin Karimuddin, a Rohingya translator who did far more than linguistic conversion. “He wasn’t just translating words but conveying messages, creating trust, and establishing a collaborative atmosphere,” said Watanabe, Fujimoto’s translator. 

One of the most remarkable aspects of “Lost Land” is its linguistic significance. Beyond being a narrative, the film serves as a critical instrument of cultural preservation. Karimuddin, who is also a producer on the film, approached his role like a linguistic curator. “As a Rohingya myself, I had the privilege of choosing words carefully, trying to instill poetry, capturing linguistic nuances that are slowly disappearing. So, the film is very important when it comes to the preservation of a people’s language. It was a privilege for me to contribute to it,” he said. 

As they were making the first fiction film focused on Rohingya experiences, the team felt an immense responsibility. “Lost Land” aims to humanize a community often reduced to statistics, giving voice and complexity to individual experiences.

Shomira Rias Uddin and Muhammad Shofik Rias Uddin (R) in 'Lost Land.' (Supplied) 

“In our film, we had around 200 people — including extras — who were all part of the Rohingya community. I felt in order to show their feelings and their voice; it was really important to bring in the Rohingya people and tell the story together with them,” said Fujimoto. 

For Fujimoto, whose previous films include “Passage of Life” (2017) and “Along the Sea” (2020), the film represents more than an artistic achievement. It’s a form of personal and collective redemption. “I can now clearly talk about these people without hesitation,” he said. 

The filmmaker’s future ambitions involve expanding on this project. He sees “Lost Land” as a crucial first step, and hopes to support Rohingya filmmakers in telling their own stories directly. 

“The next phase is bringing narratives from the Rohingya perspective, directed by Rohingya filmmakers,” he said.