Skip to content Skip to Search
Skip navigation

Saudi director’s labour of love takes the kingdom to Cannes

Tawfik Alzaidi TwentyOne Entertainment
Saudi Arabian director Tawfik Alzaidi on the set of his film Norah
  • First time a Saudi film will compete
  • Won at Red Sea Film Festival
  • Director Tawfik Alzaidi is self-taught

For the first time a Saudi film has been selected to compete in the Cannes film festival, catapulting its little-known self-taught director into the limelight.

Tawfik Alzaidi was so surprised that he’d managed to break through to the big time that he kept the news that his film Norah had been accepted for the ‘Un Certain Regard’ competition to himself for some time. 

“People tell me ‘you’ve broken the barrier’. There had been many attempts in previous years but they didn’t make it so I’ve given people hope,” Alzaidi says in a late-night Riyadh cafe as he prepares to visit the French Riviera town during the festival’s May 14-25 run. 



The unassuming forty-something from Medina had previously worked in television production, then began working on short films, learning the trade on his terms before quietly beginning to conceive his first long-form work. 

The social and economic reforms introduced from 2016 created a new atmosphere that suddenly made things seem more possible for an independent filmmaker. 

Alzaidi set to work planning the film in meticulous detail, and then secured funding from various Saudi entities to cover filming, post-production and distribution. 

But the film, a teenage girl’s coming-of-age story in a Bedouin community, began to attract attention from bigger players – attention vindicated when it won in the the best Saudi film category during last year’s Red Sea Film Festival. 

“When I was looking for funding, MBC Studios came to me,” Alzaidi says, referring to the Saudi-owned MBC network, a leading producer of Arabic news and entertainment. 

“They demanded a lot of changes to the script. They wanted to bring another director in, someone to supervise me. I said no because I had faith in what I was doing,” he says, adding that they even wanted to change the ending.

“They wanted to control the film and if I’d given them that chance I don’t think it would be in Cannes.” 

Saudi Arabian director Tawfik Alzaidi on the set of his film NorahTwentyOne Entertainment
Tawfik Alzaidi during the filming of Norah

The finished product, redolent of Saudi director Haifa Mansour’s Wadjda which was nominated for Britain’s Bafta awards, is clearly a labour of love in the best film d’auteur tradition. 

Each frame seems to have been arranged as a portrait painting through the use of light, colour and a sense of space. Modernities are removed to recreate the 1990s. There are also personal touches from Alzaidi’s life, such as cars or films he has liked. 

The lead actress Maria Bahrawi, who had never acted before, was chosen two weeks beforehand based on Alzaidi’s sense of who she is from chatting about other things. And he managed to win the participation of Abdullah Sadhan, a well-known comedy actor who had never done films before. 

“People who’ve seen it always say the same thing to me: that it’s a realistic film,” Alzaidi says, proud of the description. “I saw the films coming up in Saudi Arabia – they’re closer to TV movies or YouTube sketches. But I wanted to do cinema.”

Latest articles

Emirates' original refurbishment plan, covering 120 aircraft, will now increase to 191 aircraft

Emirates expands retrofit plan by 60% to 191 aircraft

Emirates has expanded its fleet refurbishment programme by 60 percent to include 43 A380s and 28 Boeing 777 aircraft. The original refurbishment plan, covering 67 Emirates A380s and 53 of its 777s, will now be increased to 191. “We’re topping up our multi-billion dollar investment in the retrofit programme to introduce cutting-edge cabin products on […]

Adnoc Gas's listing last year. Revenue rose 15 percent year on year to more than $6 billion

Adnoc Gas targets global expansion as profit rises 21%

Adnoc Gas said its net profit rose 21 percent year on year to $1.2 billion, as the Abu Dhabi-listed energy provider invests in expanding its global operations. Revenue rose 15 percent year on year to more than $6 billion, driven by a strong increase in demand in the UAE. Domestic sales volumes increased by 14 percent annually. […]

Maersk CEO Vincent Clerc. The company said its vessels are now using 40 percent more fuel per journey

Red Sea disruption to hit capacity by 20% says Maersk

Danish shipping major Maersk expects Red Sea disruption to lead to a 15 to 20 percent industry-wide capacity loss on the Asia to North Europe and Mediterranean routes in the second quarter of 2024. The complexity of the situation in the Red Sea has intensified over the last few months, the company said in an […]

Etihad Airways CEO Antonoaldo Neves (centre) said that he is 'big believer in fleet flexibility' and does not like to lock in big orders

Etihad weighs options to buy directly from planemakers  

Abu Dhabi’s Etihad Airways is exploring the option of buying a limited number of new aircraft directly from Airbus and Boeing, utilising the available delivery slots that have been canceled or rescheduled by other airlines. However, the state-backed airline’s CEO Antonoaldo Neves has no plans to place a “large order”, Reuters reported. “I’m a big believer […]