{"id":37857,"date":"2022-08-15T07:00:06","date_gmt":"2022-08-15T05:00:06","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/a-desk.org\/?p=37857"},"modified":"2023-07-09T14:44:33","modified_gmt":"2023-07-09T12:44:33","slug":"on-bodies-and-corporeality-in-moroccan-films-a-female-gaze","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/a-desk.org\/en\/magazine\/on-bodies-and-corporeality-in-moroccan-films-a-female-gaze\/","title":{"rendered":"On bodies and corporeality in Moroccan films: A female gaze"},"content":{"rendered":"<blockquote><p>\u00ab\u00a0Dignity is to have a dream, a strong dream that gives you a vision, a world where you have a place, where your participation, as tinny as it is, will change something; you are in a Harem when the world doesn\u2019t need you\u00bb .<br \/>\n<em>R\u00eaves de femme\u00a0: Une enfance au Harem<\/em> By Fatima Mernissi<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>The first Moroccan film directed by a female director I watched in a cinema theatre was \u201cThe dry eyes\u201d (2003) by Narjiss Nejjar (1971, Tangier). I watched it with my mother. I was fourteen. I remember it was disturbing: a village in the middle Atlas Mountains, inhabited by prostitutes, old and young. Men were visiting them for pleasure. They were strong but accepting their condition. A scene that stroke me: a little girl my age from the village menstruated, the stained piece of clothe running in the river. Few scenes later, the main Character <em>Hala<\/em> pushes her to enter the world of women subjected to Men pleasure. A man, Fahd who is not like the others, tries to save her, but it\u2019s too late. He opens the door \u201cthe client\u201d has finished and we see the little body in despair, on the floor, after the horrific had happened. Nejjar captured the oppression of the female body and its objectification to male pleasure. But not only. Fahd, the outsider, a man like no other around has a different gaze, a tender one. When about to make love to the protagonist <em>Hala<\/em>, she doesn\u2019t understand his tenderness and shouts at him to take her like a man does. In the last shots, the same man running naked in the snow with make up on, to prove to her that being a man is also showing vulnerability. One of the first nude scenes in Moroccan cinema and maybe the most subversive one: unveiling the male body becomes a challenge to the hyper-sexualisation of the female one, an alternative to the ready-made sexy images in cinema, gender is deconstructed and reconstructed through the filmmaker\u2019s gaze. Corporeality is one of cinema\u2019s favourite subjects, how we live, weave and express our Corporeality says a lot about us as individuals and as social animals. I didn\u2019t grasp everything from that film, but when I knew later that it was a first film I understood a lot about its rawness, honesty yet decency. Few dialogues and a restrained acting style to perfectly portray the unspoken of the oppressed and over-sexualized body of a woman prostitute (or sex worker like the capitalistic trendy vocabulary like to reframe it) and its social and intimate conditions. I grow up and decided that my passion for films is what I want to pursue as a job. I wanted to create images as those running in my head when I daydream. I have watched all sort of films: blockbusters, old Hollywood movies, European and Arab films. I have lived through the nineties as a child, when the so-called \u201cfeminist wave\u201d in Moroccan cinema was a trend. But most of these social dramatic films, addressing \u201cwomen issues\u201d in a direct, advocatory and claiming manner, were made by men, except two directors Farida Benlyazid (to which I\u2019ll come back later) and Farida Bourquia.<\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_37783\" style=\"width: 890px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><a href=\"http:\/\/a-desk.org\/en\/magazine\/cuerpos-y-corporeidad-en-el-cine-marroqui-una-mirada-femenina\/dry-eyes\/\" rel=\"attachment wp-att-37783\"><img aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-37783\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-37783\" src=\"http:\/\/a-desk.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/08\/Dry-eyes.jpeg\" alt=\"\" width=\"880\" height=\"461\" srcset=\"https:\/\/a-desk.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/08\/Dry-eyes.jpeg 1280w, https:\/\/a-desk.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/08\/Dry-eyes-595x311.jpeg 595w, https:\/\/a-desk.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/08\/Dry-eyes-768x402.jpeg 768w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 880px) 100vw, 880px\" \/><\/a><p id=\"caption-attachment-37783\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Still from &#8220;The Dry Eyes&#8221; (2003) by Narjiss Nejjar<\/p><\/div>\n<p>I was in a film school, all dreams and hopes high with my peers, female and male, dreaming of becoming the new wave of Moroccan filmmakers. We would watch and talk films night and day, write ideas and tell each other in detail about every script bad or bad that crossed our mind. When one day, a male colleague told me something shocking \u201cDo you really believe yourself? To be honest no female directors have made great films\u201d. I remember being shocked because such idea, had never crossed my mind. I never thought about myself as a \u201cfemale\u201d director to be. When I shivered to a Kiarostami or Sukurov film, their gender and especially mine was not of interest to me. But then I understood that being a \u201cfemale\u201d director is something that is becoming a label that will be hard to fight, a label that restrain women from creative freedom, once again. Harems days are over maybe, but the mental Harems are the harder to demolish and women creators are sometimes still captives of these imaginary harems. Fortunately, some women filmmakers have and demolished the walls. From documentary to fiction, Laila Kilani (1970, Casablanca) moves freely between genres and universe. Her debut film \u201cOn the Edge\u201d (2011) is a punch in the face: a febrile camera with a panting pace runs after young workers in Tangier Industrial Port-Med. Two young adult girls work at a caned fish manufacture try their best to make end meet in a city where they are strangers. At night, they &#8220;invite themselves in&#8221; they don\u2019t sell their bodies, like the protagonist announces from the first scenes. She is constantly speaking, in a long uninterrupted monologue that we have to endure as an audience. She doesn\u2019t have the time to sit or think, she moves and talks and walks fast, like running away from time that is ticking. She has to get rid of poverty, from the smell of poverty as embodied in the film by the fish smell stuck to her skin despite her attempts to scrub it every night after work. Here, the body of the female worker is recomposed in its little details: not only the smell, but the way it moves, it looks and it experiences the world.\u00a0 Running against the clock of capitalist exploitation, she has no time to rest, working day in the factory and night as semi-prostitutes. The insanely fast pace is both the result of her hard life conditions but also the way her body fights death, annihilation and crush. No place for love or sexuality, this corporeality is about not being crushed by reality, about survival, is about becoming alienated by work and making a living.<\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_37789\" style=\"width: 890px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><a href=\"http:\/\/a-desk.org\/en\/magazine\/cuerpos-y-corporeidad-en-el-cine-marroqui-una-mirada-femenina\/on-the-edge-film\/\" rel=\"attachment wp-att-37789\"><img aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-37789\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-37789\" src=\"http:\/\/a-desk.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/08\/On-the-edge-film.jpeg\" alt=\"\" width=\"880\" height=\"440\" srcset=\"https:\/\/a-desk.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/08\/On-the-edge-film.jpeg 1440w, https:\/\/a-desk.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/08\/On-the-edge-film-595x298.jpeg 595w, https:\/\/a-desk.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/08\/On-the-edge-film-768x384.jpeg 768w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 880px) 100vw, 880px\" \/><\/a><p id=\"caption-attachment-37789\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Still from &#8220;On the edge&#8221; (2011) by Laila Kilani<\/p><\/div>\n<p>Unsurpassed alienation is also one of subjects explored in \u201cThe narrow frame of the night\u201d (2014) by Tala Hadid (1974, London), another debut film by Moroccan-Iraqui director. She had chosen to explore her complex identity by transposing the trauma into a male character. How refreshing! A man forever wandering between foreign and familiar spaces in quest for his fragmented memory and lost brother. The land his family fled due to the ruling regime still hunts him. The consequences of torture and mass killing, political oppression and persecution is the impossibility to live the present or forecast the future. Through Hadid\u2019s gaze, oppressive systems have long lasting effect on perception, memory and dreams. Non-linearity is used to embody a fragmented memory and sense of time that will never recover. The only solution for such tragic path is through endless wandering, while he researches his lost sibling. The body keeps its motion as a way to resist asphyxiation. Tala\u2019s montage is never explanatory, almost mystical, names and events are captured only for their musical and poetic significance, to penetrate the interiority of the character and never to serve a plot.\u00a0 To serve maybe this eternal impossible return to a romanticized paradise, where life has begun and the most loved are lost.<\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_37843\" style=\"width: 870px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-37843\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-37843 size-full\" src=\"http:\/\/a-desk.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/08\/LEAD-IMAGE-e1659966777506.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"860\" height=\"518\" \/><p id=\"caption-attachment-37843\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Still from \u201cThe narrow frame of the night\u201d (2014) by Tala Hadid<\/p><\/div>\n<p>The same quest is one of Nadia the protagonist in \u201cA door to the sky\u201d (1989) by Farida Benlyazid (1948, Tangier). She is this time able to realize the return. On his dying bed, the Moroccan father (played by the late Ahmed Bouanani) calls for his French children for a last farewell. Nadia, a young French bourgeois woman is visiting her agonizing father in Fes. Her mother is French but had lived with the father in Morocco. Nadia is a westerner, when her father dies she mourns over alcohol and cigarettes, refusing to be part of the funeral rituals. Forced by her sister, who is completely embracing her Moroccan and Muslim heritage, Nadia wears a white mourning Djellaba and joins a congregation of women.<\/p>\n<p>She stays at a distance though, hypnotized by the voice of a woman chanting Quran, Kirana. Finally, she gets inside and attends a <em>Hadra <\/em>session of religious soufi poems chanted by the women. The first discussion Kirana and Nadia have is about corporeality: Kirana urges Nadia to eat even if she is mourning. Every body part, tongue, hands and the guts will all give a testimony on the judgement day over their owner. From the beginning of the film, the sacred words of Qur\u2019an, the void felt by the protagonist Nadia are linked to the way she lives, treats and relates to her body. An embodied spirituality that is calling Nadia, away from her cold intellectualizing western habits that cut her away from really getting into things and connecting to her higher self. From that moment, begins a journey of philosophical learning for Nadia, who not only discovers her roots and starts a battle against her own doubts, but enters a new dimension of reality. Dreams and nightmares, visions and buried memories start flowing at the surface. Strange events happen to retain Nadia from going back to France and stay in the Riad. The journey of Nadia (that I won\u2019t spoil, you will have to watch this beautiful film) is one of spiritual quest, of a woman with a complex identity choosing traditions and mysticism over rationalism and western materialistic world views. The particular corporeality expressed in this film explores what is hidden, what the body and the skin won\u2019t forget even if the mind is busy rationalizing the world. Finally, its through her senses that Nadia reconnect with who she is, and even finds love at the end. Farida Benlyazid Spirituality is not ascetic, it\u2019s fully embracing and mending the body\u2019s wounds and needs.<\/p>\n<p>There are other films directed by female Moroccan filmmakers that I find admirable, in relation to issues related to corporeality, the body and its passions. I stopped on these four filmmakers, as I found remarkable they ways they addressed and explored different aspects of corporeality in Moroccan society in their debut feature films. As I\u2019m working on my debut feature, I need to mend the thread of transmission and look up to my elders for what have been accomplished before and what still has to be, in the near future. Making images through cinema temporality is a striking way to reflect and create realities and understand different aspects of corporeality. Like in \u201cA door to the sky\u201d corporeality and spirituality merge to a new spiritual dimension, only embodied in dreams, after death maybe, and Cinema.<\/p>\n<p>Let\u2019s experience the world through our bodies, and our bodies through the world while contemplating Ibn Arabi\u2019s words in <em>The book of Meccan revelations<\/em> (1240).<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>\u00abAnd to such truth the human being returns in his sleep and after his death, then sees appearances as images by itself, addressing them as it addresses him: bodies without doubt.\u00bb<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>(Featured Image: Still from <em>Une porte sur le ciel<\/em> (1989) by <span lang=\"EN-GB\">Farida Benlyazid)<\/span><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>\u00ab\u00a0Dignity is to have a dream, a strong dream that gives you a vision, a world where you have a place, where your participation, as tinny as it is, will&#8230;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2778,"featured_media":37794,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_relevanssi_hide_post":"","_relevanssi_hide_content":"","_relevanssi_pin_for_all":"","_relevanssi_pin_keywords":"","_relevanssi_unpin_keywords":"","_relevanssi_related_keywords":"","_relevanssi_related_include_ids":"","_relevanssi_related_exclude_ids":"","_relevanssi_related_no_append":"","_relevanssi_related_not_related":"","_relevanssi_related_posts":"","_relevanssi_noindex_reason":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[6172],"tags":[],"coauthors":[],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v22.6 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>On bodies and corporeality in Moroccan films: A female gaze &#8211; 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