Find hope and resilience through 13 diverse feature films at the 8th Ajyal Film Festival
The hybrid edition of the 8th Ajyal Film Festival, presented by the Doha Film Institute (DFI) from November 18-23, will present an inspiring selection of 13 thought-provoking feature films from across the globe online to offer participants a safe event experience.
Delivering inspirational stories of hope, resilience, and courage using powerfully creative narratives, the selected films will be assessed across three distinct juries – Mohaq, Hilal, and Bader.
Each jury has presented a selection of carefully curated features and short films to analyze and deliberate on films in their respective categories, awarding Best Film prizes accordingly.
Three feature films screening in the competition are supported by the Doha Film Institute, underlining the Institute’s commitment to unlock creative voices and support quality film productions and reinforcing Qatar’s continued focus on promoting distinctive and compelling narratives of universal resonance.
In competition in the Mohaq segment for jurors aged 8 to 12 are Dino Dana (Canada/2019) by J.J. Johnson, Microplastic Madness (USA/2019) by Atsuko Quirk and Debby Lee Cohen, Turu, The Wacky Hen (Spain, Argentina/2019) by Eduardo Gondell and Víctor Monigote, and Bikes (Spain/2019) by Manuel J. García.
Ajyal Jurors aged 13 to 17 in the Hilal category will watch and evaluate My Favorite War (Latvia, Norway/2020) by Ilze Burkovska Jacobsen, Sun Children (Iran/2020) by Majid Majidi, The Reason I Jump (UK, USA/2020) by Jerry Rothwell, and The Wolves (Mexico/2019) by Samuel Kishi.
Ajyal’s Bader Jurors, aged 18 to 25, will choose a winner from 200 Meters (Palestine, Jordan, Qatar, Italy, Sweden/2020) by Ameen Nayfeh, An Unusual Summer (Germany, Palestine/2020) by Kamal Aljafari, Father (Serbia, France, Germany, Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia/2020) by Srdan Golubović, Gevar's Land (France, Qatar/2020) by Qutaiba Barhamji, and Yalda, A Night for Forgiveness (France, Germany, Switzerland, Luxemburg, Lebanon, Iran/2019) by Massoud Bakhshi.
The Mohaq Selection
- Dino Dana follows Dana Jain, a feisty 10-year-old paleontologist in training, who sees dinosaurs in the real world, completing an experiment that asks where all the kid dinosaurs are.
- Making its MENA premiere, Microplastic Madness is an inspirational and optimistic look at the local and global plastic pollution crisis as told through a refreshing urban youth point of view with an emphatic “take action” message.
- In Turu, The Wacky Hen, a hen unable to lay eggs finds her life changed when she is sold to a music teacher.
- Bikes is a free-wheeling animated adventure for children and adults that teaches the importance of friendship, teamwork, and the need for green transport in building a more sustainable future.
The Hilal Selection
- My Favorite War is a personal, animated documentary about the director's life growing up in Latvia during the Soviet era 1970-1990.
- Sun Children made its debut at Venice earlier this year and spotlights the resilience and creativity of youth through the lens of child labour to inspire lasting societal change.
- An adaptation of the book by Naoki Higashida, The Reason I Jump explores the experiences of nonspeaking autistic people around the world.
- In The Wolves, two children emigrate to the US with their mother. Their days pass in a tiny flat waiting for her to come back as they hold on to the hope of visiting Disneyworld.
The Bader Selection
- In 200 Meters, which premiered at Venice this year, a Palestinian father trapped on the other side of the separation wall is trying to reach the hospital for his son.
- Everyday family life, or neighbours going to work, Unusual Summer captures fleeting moments of poetry whereas, in the background, the daily choreography of Ramla, located in today's Israel, comes to the surface.
- Father is the story of a man whose children are taken away because of poverty, setting him on a journey from his village in the south of Serbia to the capital city, out of protest, dignity and desperation to become a hero.
- Gevar's Land follows the labour-filled days of Gevar, a Syrian refugee, whose small garden on the outskirts of a housing project became his “raison d‘être”, or rather, “a reason to do”. The DFI-grant recipient film questions the idea of territory, which often goes hand in hand with the need to erect borders.
- In Yalda, A Night for Forgiveness, 22-year-old Maryam is accused of killing her husband and is sentenced to death. The only person who can save her is Mona, Nasser's daughter.
Tickets for the 8th Ajyal Film Festival are available for online purchase. For up-to-date information and ticket purchase please click here.
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