When did you decide you wanted to be a film director? Was it something you always had in mind?
I learned from her and began to play with images myself, and editing my own small projects. Eventually words, image, and poetry – everything came together for me....
I then worked in the film industry for some years, as a production assistant on sets, in a literary agency reading screenplays, and assisting documentary filmmakers as well. Eventually I decided to study film formally and went to New York to do that.
I began writing Salt of this Sea five years ago. When I first started writing this film and well into the production stage, I heard over and over again that the subject of this film (the right to return) was too controversial, too much of a red line. I was advised not to make a first feature with such a dividing subject matter, that it would be better to start my career with something more commercial, something sweeter or folkloric. And then later, once I was more established, to do this film. Well if it’s the last film I ever make, I’m ok with that.
But to shoot elsewhere - it wasn’t even an option for me. Perhaps because I’ve made films in Palestine under even worse conditions, like in 2001 during the last intifada. Also, being in those specific places – being in Jaffa, being in Jerusalem, are so integral to the film – I couldn’t imagine having to recreate those places. I think it would just be a disappointment to me! Let alone the impossibility of trying to create the Apartheid Wall. In the end we had to compromise anyway - after I was denied return to Palestine by the Israelis, we had to shoot one scene in Marseille, France. We shipped Emad’s truck and most of our props from the port of Haifa to the port of Marseille. We re-created a street in Marseille to look like we were in Palestine.
It was also a bittersweet moment as the world premiere of Salt of this Sea was scheduled to take place ten days earlier in Palestine, not in Cannes. When I tried to cross the bridge from Jordan to Palestine in order to screen the film, I was prevented from entering the West Bank by the Israeli Authorities and the screening could not take place.
So even though being at Cannes was the greatest honor, the heart of the film lies with the people who made this film happen – the cast and crew and all the people across Palestine who gave their hearts, and opened their homes and themselves to our crew and to our work, who gave everything because they believe this story should be told. For me, the greatest moment of this film was to be there with them and to share the fruit of this labor, which was truly a labor of love, and for all of us to be together for the world premiere. Instead, that moment was taken away from us.Annemarie Jacir has been working in independent film since 1994 and has written, directed and produced a number of films including ‘a post oslo history’ (1998), ‘The Satellite Shooters’ (2001) and ‘like twenty impossibles’ (2003). She has taught courses at Columbia, Bethlehem, and Birzeit University. She also works as a freelance editor and cinematographer.
‘Salt of this Sea’ (2008) is her first feature film, and her second work to debut at Cannes Film Festival. Having been banned from returning to Palestine, she now lives in Amman, Jordan.
Tribeca Film Festival: Suheir Hammad & Annemarie Jacir
http://www.philistinefilms.org
Salt of This Sea (Milh Hadha al-Bahr) - ملح هذا البحر
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