Mon Tissu Préféré

Mon Tissu Préféré

critics

''
The result shows a beautiful balance between these two dimensions, inscribing the intimate journey of a disillusioned Syrian woman in the precarious future of her country.
Critikat
Clément Graminiès
''
A beautiful story of emancipation.
Ouest France
Michel Oriot
''
Another Arab cinema is possible, here is the proof as unstable as sparkling.
Première
Michaël Patin

Mon Tissu Préféré

Damascus, March 2011. The revolution begins to rumble. Nahla is a young woman of 25, torn between her desire for freedom and the hope of leaving the country thanks to an arranged marriage to Samir, a Syrian expatriate in the United States. But Samir prefers her younger sister Myriam, more docile. Nahla then gets closer to her new neighbor, Madame Jiji, who has just arrived in the building to open a brothel.

selections & awards

Un Certain Regard Award for Best Screenplay
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2018
Un Certain Regard award
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2018
Un Certain Regard Award for the stage direction
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2018
Un Certain Regard Jury Award
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2018
Un Certain Regard Award for Best Actor
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2018

Gaya

Jiji

Gaya Jiji is a Syrian director born in Damascus in 1979. Holder of a master's degree in directing from the University of Paris VIII, the young woman obtained a grant from the script development fund, awarded by the Amiens festival. She has already directed several short films, which have been acclaimed by the critics. The last one, entitled Morning, noon, evening... and morning, released in 2011 and lasting 19 minutes, is touring festivals around the world.

In 2014, she is invited to the Cannes Film Festival by the Fabrique des Cinémas du Monde. She then stays in France thanks to obtaining an artistic visa. She has just spent two years in Syria, close to the war that ravages her country. Following this experience, the young woman would like to direct her first feature film. Recluse at home to be spared from bullets, she spends her time writing, strongly inspired by the dramatic environment that surrounds her. Like many other Syrians, Gaya Jiji is indeed strongly marked by the conflict. According to her, art represents the only way out, the escape that allows one to survive the horror.

In 2016, she received the Women in Motion Award from the Kering Foundation at the Cannes Film Festival. In May 2018, her film Mon Tissu Préféré was selected for the Festival Un Certain Regard in Cannes. It is in the running for the Caméra d'or.

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