The 30th Sarajevo Film Festival will pay tribute to Palestinian director Elia Suleiman in recognition of his outstanding contribution to the art of film. The filmmaker will be presented with the Honorary Heart of Sarajevo Award and honored with a retrospective of his selected works in the Festival’s “Tribute to” Programme.
Suleiman was a guest at the 25th Sarajevo Film Festival in 2019 where his film “It Must Be Heaven” was screened in the Open Air program. The film received the Special Jury Mention at Cannes the same year. He also served as the President of the Jury at the 22nd Sarajevo Film Festival in 2016 and was a guest at the 19th Sarajevo Film Festival in 2013.
“It is our privilege to pay tribute to the esteemed author and friend of the Sarajevo Film Festival, whose universal language of cinema speaks to fundamental human values and emotions: fear and hope, home and homeland. With his trademark wit, humor and profound insight, he navigates the complexities of our existence, shedding light on the absurdities of life with unmatched clarity and poignancy, portraying the spirit and identity of Palestine with a unique authorial style. Now, in the darkest of times in his native land, his work serves as a beacon of understanding, reminding us of the power of storytelling to inspire meaningful dialogue.”, stated Jovan Marjanovi, director of the Sarajevo Film Festival.
Suleiman directed his first two short films in the Untied States: “Introduction to the End of an Argument” and “Homage by Assassination”, winning numerous awards. He later settled in Jerusalem, where the European Commission had entrusted him with the mission of creating a Film and Media Department at Birzeit University. His first feature film, “Chronicle of a Disappearance”, won the Best First Film Prize at the 1996 Venice Film Festival. In 2002, “Divine Intervention” won the Jury Prize and the FIPRESCI International Critics Prize of the Cannes Film Festival as well as the Best Foreign Film Prize at the European Awards in Rome. In 2007, he was chosen as one of the 35 directors of “To Each His Own Cinema”, a collective film for the Cannes Film Festival 60th anniversary. His feature film “The Time That Remains” was in the official competition at the Cannes Film Festival in 2009.
In 2012, he completed a short film titled “Diary of a Beginner,” part of a collective feature titled “7 Days in Havana”. The film was in the official selection “Un Certain Regard” in Cannes Film Festival. His last feature film titled “It Must Be Heaven” won the Jury Special Mention in Cannes in 2019, and the FIPRESCI International Critics Prize of the Cannes Film Festival.
Elia Suleiman has participated in numerous Festivals as a Jury member including the Cannes Film Festival (2006) and the Venice Film Festival. Elia Suleiman is the recipient of numerous tributes amongst which is the Prince Claus in 2008; He was named “Officier de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres” by the Ministry of Culture in 2020.
Festival takes place August 16 – 23