Use the search bar to find projects, completed films, and TFL community members.

Projects

Dead Sea

A bittersweet Palestinian legend revolving around a mysterious coffin traveling towards Jerusalem.

synopsis

In a coffee-shop in the centre of Ramallah among a crowd of customers we find Khaled, a nostalgic reporter, Abed, a taxi driver and the cynical Emil, a passionate reader who dreams of being a writer. It’s the sixth Anniversary of the death of Pr. Arafat, November 2010, in Ramallah. Khaled wants to broadcast a story on his illegal radio station, Emil and Abed are curious about it. Khaled starts telling a secret story of Morad and Firas, two old bodyguards of Arafat, who carried out a mission to bring his body to rest in Jerusalem, as Arafat always dreamt. The 3 friends in the coffee-shop discuss the details of the operation. Emil has a completely different version of the story and feels a bit worried; he doesn’t want this subject to be published since he is writing a book about it. Abed thinks it’s all a rumour and nothing really happened, it was all an accident; and he is afraid this story will bring them serious problems with the Palestinian authorities. But Khaled insists on opening the discussion, and each one of them fights for his right to hold the truth. Was the body in a coffin, smuggled through a tunnel? As Khaled wants to tell his audience, or was it in a concrete block supposed to be part of the wall? As Emil writes in his investigation book! Or was it in the stolen car with the wooden box inside it, in which the two PR officers went on a trip to the Dead Sea? As Abed rumours! Were Firas and Morad Heroes, Losers, did Firas succeed or fail? Did he stay alive or was he shot and killed? Some say Firas was seen alive. Others say that his body was seen floating on the waters of the Dead Sea, as nothing can stay long under its murky and salty waters. The three stories intertwine, just like the fantasy of each storyteller, we will travel from one fantasy into another, sometimes confirming and sometimes contradicting each other, making the story an image and a reflection of a conversation held between a radio announcer and his friends.

Director’statement

In 2004 Arafat died; under no circumstances would Arafat be buried in Jerusalem, Sharon said. I remember laughing about the eternal and personal animosity of these two big figures, even after death, cynically its very funny. I thought it would be wonderful to kidnap the body of Arafat and just bury it in Jerusalem, sneaking it under the nose of Sharon. That’s when I realized it could be a good story to tell and so it started as a road movie, a heroic almost action-film. Each time I took a taxi in the city of Ramallah, I always questioned the driver about possible roads to reach Jerusalem without having to cross any checkpoint or face the wall? Then I would question them about what they thought of Arafat? I was surprised by a common answer: who said that Arafat is dead in the first place! Thinking of Arafat I found myself working - like with any other iconic figure - on such a powerful character, always surrounded by myths and rumours. In 2007 I realized that the story is not only about kidnapping the body of Arafat, but also and mainly, about the urban legends and stories people tell in the streets and coffee shops. In Dead Sea I want to point out the fact that there are many contradictions in the Palestinian stories about their history, exodus, sacrifices and resistance. Most of these stories end up as legends or myths. I want to question the Palestinian dream. Could it ever become a reality, or will it remain a utopia? And what are its effects on the Palestinian psychology? This dream of freedom and independence can become a mental obsession, creating frustration and claustrophobia. But, this dream can also be a strength that helps you to survive boredom and misery - as well as a disease undermining one’s ability to cope with reality. Through Dead Sea I would like to give audiences around the world the feeling, for a few hours, that their dreams can come true and they can see it happen in front of their eyes. Even if everybody knows the story of Dead Sea, it will always remain a heroic fantasy with legendary characters: to make the body of Arafat rest eternally in the city of Jerusalem, as he wished. It is the story of a victory, symbolic and metaphoric. What matters, is not that Arafat is finally buried in Jerusalem, what is important is that it might be true, and that a small place for dreams and hopes still exists. This film is not a pamphlet; it continues to talk about a dream and its possibility of achievement, it’s a symbolic legend that will remain.

TFL PROGRAMME:
ScriptLab 2009
Discover more details here:
Download
PDF
TFL Catalogue 2009

All the updates once a month in your mailbox, subscribe to the TFL newsletter.