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Kaouther Ben Hania: Pioneering Tunisian filmmaker lands second Oscar nomination

Kaouther Ben Hania: Pioneering Tunisian filmmaker lands second Oscar nomination
Tunisian filmmaker Kaouther Ben Hania won her second Oscar nomination for her docu-fiction 'Four Daughters', selected for Best Documentary Feature Film.
2 min read
24 January, 2024
Ben Hania, 46, saw her latest filmÌýthe docu-fiction hybrid 'Four Daughters', nominated forÌýBest Documentary Feature Film at the 2024 Academy Awards [Getty]

Tunisian director Kaouther Ben Hania has made history for Arab women filmmakers afterÌýsecuring her second Oscar nomination on Tuesday.

Ben Hania, 46, saw her latest filmÌý– the docu-fiction hybrid 'Four Daughters'Ìý– nominated forÌýBest Documentary Feature Film at the 2024 Academy Awards.

The nomination marked the first time an Arab woman filmmaker had earned two Oscar nods, after her film 'The Man Who Sold His Skin' was nominated forÌýBest International Feature Film at the 2021 awards.

Other Arab women directors nominated for Oscars in previous years include Palestinian filmmakerÌýFarah Nabulsi, whose film 'The Present'Ìýwas also nominated in 2021 in the Best Short Film category, and Lebanese filmmaker Nadine Labaki, who was nominated for Best International Feature Film in 2019 for 'Capernaum'.

Ben Hania's 'Four Daughters', released in France in July 2023, is a documentary film that follows the family of a Tunisian mother named Olfa Hamrouni, whose two eldest daughters – Rahma and Ghofrane – run away from home to join an extremist group in Libya.

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Speaking toÌý°®ÂþµºÌýin 2023 at the Cannes Film Festival premiere ofÌýFour Daughters,ÌýBen Hania said: "You have so many doubts, and there are days when I say to myself, this is all rubbish, I shouldn't have made this film. It's long. It’s stressful. And then comes the good news... so you take it."

Her success is also a testament to the recent wave of Tunisian cinema in the post-revolution years, especially afterÌýlast year’sÌýedition of the Cannes festival sawÌýseveral Tunisian filmsÌýby young directors receive wide acclaim.

Along with KaoutherÌýBen Hania, Tunisian filmmakers like Ala Eddine Slim, Walid Mattar, Abdelhamid Bouchnak, Mehdi M. Barsaoui, Erige Sehiri, Youssef Chebbi, and Mohamed Ben Attia, who are mostly in their forties, represent a new generation of filmmaking talents freed by the "Jasmine Revolution".

A lack of public funds in Tunisia for theÌýcultural sector means that Tunisian filmmakers still rely on countries like France, Germany, or Saudi Arabia to produce films.

ButÌýaccording to Ben Hania – who grew up in Sidi Bouzid, the cradle of the 2010-2011 revolutionÌý– a new creative energy and freedom of thought persists among Tunisian filmmakers.

"Of course [we can speak about a new wave of cinema in Tunisia], because there's no longer any censorship, and that changes everything. In other words, we're able to make poignant films that are in touch with reality," she told °®Âþµº last year.

"Reality is not confiscated by the dictatorship, so we're trying to reclaim the streets, reclaim our stories, and our imaginations too, and that's very important."

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