At the 82nd Venice Film Festival FRED Film Radio interviewed director Shahad Ameen to talk about “Hijra”, screening at Venezia Spotlight section.
For Shahad Ameen, “Hijra” is a very personal film that reflects her personal story through themes of female freedom and identity. “For me, every film I make has to be personal. Otherwise, let’s all do the same film”, explains the director. “For me, the most exciting part about filmmaking is trying to find your voice. And maybe you will fail with the audiences, but that’s the most exciting part is finding new ways to tell a story. And with Hijra, I wanted to say something about my culture and my society that I feel is unknown in international cinema. I wanted to present Saudi Arabia in a different light. I wanted to explore the ideas, the meaning of freedom from the perspective of different generations of women. Because right now, I feel in this world, we’re all trying to view things in the same way. Is that fun? I don’t think so. I think what’s fun is for us to all have different perspectives and different ways of looking at the world. In Hijra, I try to explore all these themes while maintaining my weirdness in making films”.
In “Hijra” Sarah’s journey of discovery uncovers many of her family’s secrets. How, in the director’s opinion, does this difference between her generation and her grandmother’s reflect the diversity of women in Saudi Arabia today? “Throughout my years working as an Arab filmmaker and being a female filmmaker, I got a lot of attention, a lot of applause, and a lot of amazing things came my way, and I’m very thankful. With that came also the assumption that I must be very strong and very independent. I hope I am, and I love that. But with it came assumptions that I didn’t like”, explains Shahad Ameen. “The assumption that maybe my mother’s generations, or my grandmother’s generation, or other generation of Arab women, were not free, not independent or not strong. I think, in every culture, we are only focused on the modern world. But there came other generations of women that we stand on their shoulder and they are much more resilient and stronger than we are. This film is about accepting all generations of women in whichever way they choose to be themselves, authentic, independent”.
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