Yesterday was the public onsale for Abdellah Taïa's movie of his Moroccan gay novel Salvation Army, selected for New Directors, New Films on March 27 (Walter Reade) and March 28 (MoMA). Taïa will speak at both screenings. NDNF writes,
"Like the book it’s based on—Abdellah Taïa’s own 2006 landmark novel—the Moroccan author’s directorial debut is a bracing, deeply personal account of a young gay man’s awakening that avoids both cliché and the trappings of autobiography. First seen as a 15-year-old, Abdellah (Saïd Mrini) habitually sneaks away from his family’s crowded Casablanca home to engage in sexual trysts with random men in abandoned buildings. A decade later, we find Abdellah (now played by Karim Ait M’hand) on scholarship in Geneva, involved with an older Swiss professor (Frédéric Landenberg). With a clear-eyed approach, devoid of sentimentality, this wholly surprising bildungsfilm explores what it means to be an outsider, and with the help of renowned cinematographer Agnès Godard, Taïa finds a film language all his own: at once rigorous and poetic, worthy of Bresson in its concreteness and lucidity."
You should also read his autobiographical gay novel An Arab Melancholia which spans twenty years in Rabat, Paris, and Cairo.
Comments