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posted by cinemapolitica on Feb 10, 2014 - View profile

Toronto, ON

MARS AT SUNRISE - Canadian Premiere with filmmaker - Cinema Politica @ The Bloor

co-presented with the Toronto Palestine Film Festival, Beit Zatoun & POV Magazine in collaboration with Israeli Apartheid Week


6:30pm
- 8:30pm
Tuesday March 4 2014

Venue: The Bloor Hot Docs Cinema
Address: 506 Bloor Streer West, Toronto, ON
Cost: Entry by donation (suggested $2-10)
Accessibility: Venue is wheelchair accessible

» More information

Join Cinema Politica at the Bloor for the Canadian premiere of this stunning fiction film (inspired by a real creative journey) is co-presented with the Toronto Palestine Film Festival, Beit Zatoun, POV Magazine and is in collaboration with Israeli Apartheid Week Toronto. A Q&A with the filmmakers will follow the projection and guest speakers (TBA) will present the film.

MARS AT SUNRISE

 

Jessica Habie / PS - CA - US / 2013 / 90 ' / Arabic - Hebrew - English / S.T. English

MARS AT SUNRISE tells the story of a war waged on imagination. The film abstractly portrays the conflict between artists on either side of Israel’s militarized borders, and explores how a powerful creative mind survives, and even thrives, under pressure.

When Azzadeh, a young Jewish American poet, travels to Israel to see the land and people she has only ever heard about through the voices of others she uncovers stories of Israeli soldiers who reflect on the complexity of their military service; Palestinian families who are displaced and wedged between walls; and artists from both cultures who strive to paint a picture of life surrounded by conflict.

While waiting at a checkpoint in Jenin, Azzadeh meets Khaled, a Palestinian painter forced from his home in East Jerusalem. Azzadeh accepts a ride from the handsome stranger, whose life story she soon bears witness to as the two come face to face with Eyal, the young officer who once interrogated Khaled, at the next checkpoint.

Khaled tells Azzadeh the story of his arrest and torture when he refused to collaborate with Israeli Intelligence. Under the duress of solitary confinement, Khaled must use the muscles of his creative imagination to remain free despite the imprisonment of his physical being.

As he struggles, Khaled awakens a wave of jealousy, creativity and chaos in Eyal, himself a frustrated artist. But through this painter’s resistance, courage and spirit, we learn that an artist can never be imprisoned.

 

Organizer:bloor@cinemapolitica.org

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cinemapolitica (Christina Gelsomini)
Montreal, Quebec
Member since July 2011

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