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Monday, April 2, 2018

LEBANON CINEMA… (In the Entertainment industry. History of Lebanon Cinema)


Logo Lebanese Film Festival / Photo Credit: Lebanese Film Festival

LEBANON CINEMA… (In the Entertainment industry. History of Lebanon Cinema)


Lebanon Cinema

Lebanese Film Festival

Emerge Films Solutions

The cinema of Lebanon, according to film critic and historian Roy Armes, was the only other cinema in the Arabic-speaking region, beside Egypt's, that could amount to a national cinema. Cinema in Lebanon has been in existence since the 1920s, and the country has produced over 500 films.

The number of films produced each year is small, and the industry is heavily dependent on foreign funding and international box office revenues due the limited size of the domestic market. Despite that, local films have recently enjoyed a degree of success: Where Do We Go Now? By director Nadine Labaki won the People’s Choice Award at the Toronto International Film Festival, and Ziad Doueiry's The Insult was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.

History
French Mandate
The first feature, The Adventures of Elias Mabruk, was filmed in Lebanon in 1929 and directed by Jordano Pidutti. In the Ruins of Baalbeck (1936) was the first sound film. It was a hit with audiences and profitable.

By the mid-1920s cinemas were common in Beirut, and some were used as a place for political gatherings. For example, in 1925, the Communist Party met at the Crystal Cinema in Beirut. Cinemas had become so popular that in 1931, students marched in a protest, demanding that prices of movie tickets be lowered. To compete against Hollywood, France decreed that all American films that were being imported to Lebanon be dubbed into French.

Documentaries were also being made during this period, but they were heavily censored by the French.

Post-Independence
After Lebanon gained its independence from France, filmmakers began to examine local themes, especially rural life and folklore. During the post-independence period, Lebanon witnessed an economic boom that made its capital, Beirut, the financial center of the eastern Mediterranean. Lebanon's economic success, along with the presence of 38 banks and its open, multi-cultural and liberal society, made the country an alternative production choice to Egypt, which was at the time the center of filmmaking in the Arabic-speaking world. Additionally, "Lebanon had the region's best technical facilities" for film production. For the first half of the twentieth century, Lebanese cinema was very closely associated with Egyptian cinema. In addition to exporting numerous Lebanese actors and actresses, such as Nour Al Hoda and Sabah, belly dancers like Badia Massabni and producers like Assia Dagher, Lebanese distributors monopolized export of Egyptian film from 1930s – 1970s. One of the most successful directors of this period was Mohamed Selmane who was trained in Egypt and returned to Lebanon to make 30 films in 25 years.

Co-productions with Egypt and Syria were common in this period, which was considered the "Golden Age" of the Lebanese film industry. Additionally, Lebanese producers from 1945 up to 1951 played an influential role in the first stages of production of Iraqi cinema.

The film industry continued to prosper in the 1960s with Beirut rivaling Cairo’s dominance of Arab filmmaking; however, films produced in the sixties, for the most part, lacked a sense of national identity and were merely commercial films, targeting a pan-Arab audience. The musicals of the Rahbani Brothers that starred Fairuz were an exception. The Rahbani films were centered on nostalgic themes of life in Mount Lebanon villages. While many films in the sixties were filmed in the Egyptian vernacular to cater to the large Egyptian market, the Rahbani films were filmed in the Lebanese dialect. One of the Rahbani films, Safar Barlik, which was set in 1912, depicted Lebanon's struggle against the Ottoman occupation. The film became a staple rerun on Lebanese television, especially on Independence Day.

Lebanon was also a filming location for international productions. For example, in 1965, Val Guest's Where the Spies Are, starring David Niven and Françoise Dorléac, was filmed in Beirut. Twenty-Four Hours to Kill, starring Mickey Rooney, and Secret Agent Fireball, starring Richard Harrison, were also filmed in Beirut the same year. The following year in 1966, the German director, Manfred R. Köhler, filmed his film, Agent 505: Death Trap in Beirut. George Lautner's La grande sauterelle was also filmed in Beirut in 1967. Rebus, starring Ann-Margret was filmed on location at the Casino du Liban in 1969. While Honeybaby, Honeybaby was shot in 1974 in Beirut, the producers of The Man with the Golden Gun, which was partially set in Beirut, decided not to film in the Lebanese capital due to the burgeoning political problems.

Beirut hosted the first international film festival in the Arab world in 1971. Until the mid-1970s, the film industry in Lebanon was flourishing with market appeal that extended to neighboring Arabic-speaking countries. Lebanon was producing "a string of sexually indulgent films" such as Cats of Hamra Street and The Guitar of Love in 1973, starring Georgina Rizk, the Lebanese beauty queen who won Miss Universe in 1971. In the 1970s, cinema attendance in Lebanon was the highest among Arabic-speaking countries.

Civil war
Despite the war, there was an "emergence of a new wave of Lebanese filmmakers – fostering, unusually, equal numbers of women and men". Some of the filmmakers who emerged during this period were "Maroun Baghdadi, Jocelyn Saab, Borhane Alaouié, Heiny Srour, Randa Shahal Sabbag" and Jean Chamoun. In the 1970s, film themes in Lebanon were concentrated around the political conflicts that the country was undergoing. Displacement was also a recurrent theme as evident in Borhane Alaouie's Beirut, the Encounter (1981). Films of this period were characterized by a lack of closure, reflective of the seemingly endless war at the time.

One of the most important directors to emerge during this period was Maroun Baghdadi. According to Lina Khatib, author of Lebanese Cinema: Imagining the Civil War and Beyond, Baghdadi's films were "considered the cornerstone of Lebanese cinema". Maroun Baghdadi made Little Wars (1982) with aid provided by the American filmmaker, Francis Coppola. The film was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1982 Cannes Film Festival. The film also screened at New York Film Festival on 2 October 1982.

Documentaries by filmmakers like Jocelyn Saab who "adopted a mainly journalistic style" also developed rapidly and successfully during this period. Lebanese and Palestinian documentaries produced in Lebanon during the 1970s caused a surge of documentary production across the Arab world. These documentaries contributed to the development of feature film production in the early eighties.

Many filmmakers from this era, such as Jocelyn Saab, Jean Chamoun, Randa Chahal and Maroun Baghdadi, settled in France due to the prolonged conflict in Lebanon.

Beirut: The Last Home Movie is a 1987 documentary film that was directed by Jennifer Fox and shot on location at the historic Bustros mansion in Beirut. The documentary, which told the story of one of Lebanon’s wealthiest families, was awarded the Excellence in Cinematography Award and won the Grand Jury Prize Documentary at the 1988 Sundance Film Festival.

In addition to the wave of festival films and documentaries, a series of commercial films, mostly mimicking action B movies from Hollywood, were made in the early 1980s.

Post-War Revival
After the war, Beirut reemerged as one of the centers of mass media production in the Arab world. While media production was concentrated around television, there were attempts to revive the film industry in Lebanon, especially by fresh graduates of Lebanese film schools. While filmmaking schools are a rarity in the region, by the mid-1990s, six of Beirut's universities were offering degrees in cinema and television and that attracted an influx of students from Arab countries who chose to receive some or all of their media training in Lebanon.

Financing of film production in Lebanon in this period was mainly dependent on foreign support, both European and from the Lebanese diaspora.

Many films, such as Jocelyne Saab's experimental film, Once Upon a Time in Beirut, examined the destruction that was left after the war. Maroun Baghdadi's Beyrouth Hors la Vie won the Special Jury Prize at Canned in 1991. Other's like Jean-Claude Codsi's Histoire d'un retoure examined the issue of returning to the country after years of exile and war. In 1994, Codsi's film won the jury award at the Festival international du film Francophone de Namur in Belgium. While many films produced in the 1990s were hits at international festivals, Lebanese viewers were not drawn to the mainly-war themed films. An exception was West Beirut (film) (1998), which was a local and an international hit. It was not only the first Lebanese film, but also the first Arabic-language film to have general release in America.

In 1997, Youssef Chahine's French-produced film, Destiny, was shot on location in Lebanon, including the historic mountain town of in Beiteddine.

Emerge Films Solutions

Lebanon Film & Photography Production Services
Are you a media company, brand, ad agency or production company looking for film / photography production support or shooting crew in Lebanon? We have fully vetted, locally based fixers, service producers, directors, DP’s, videographers, cameramen, photographers, sound operators, production drivers, and a range of other film crew. Contact us for referrals, questions, cost estimates and references.

Want to know more about shooting in Lebanon? See below for an introduction to Lebanon locations, permits, when to shoot, costs, talent, crews, equipment, art department, studios, post facilities, visas and work permits, film friendly hotels, transport, communications and safety advice.

Lebanon Film Locations
Lebanon offers a variety of locations within one hour drive of Beirut including a blend of Middle Eastern, European and ancient architecture, white sand beaches and coastal looks, snowy mountains, luscious fields and farms, wild greenery, olive groves, cedar forests, vineyards, and waterfalls such as the Baatara Gorge Waterfall.

The capital Beirut is the main production centre and all needs to travel from there. Beirut is a beautiful and vibrant city known for its fun nightlife, beaches, restored Art Deco architecture, ‘Hope for Peace’ Monument, souks and Pigeon Rocks. As well as old-world architecture, Beirut also has modern buildings such as the impressive Beirut Terraces.

Roman ruins can be found in Baalbeck, Byblos and Tyre. Lebanon’s second city, Tripoli is known for its medieval Crusader castle and mosques.

Lebanon Film Location Permits
Lebanon is one of the most liberal countries in the Middle East. Whether you are looking to film bikinis or burkhas just about everything is possible in Lebanon.

Permits are generally a quick and easy process. B-roll shoots around Beirut require permits from the army and government. These permits generally take about a week to get. More complicated shoots involving traffic control or large setups require more time and consultation with the police. Shoots involving drones require at least two weeks to permit. Journalists heading to film in Beirut’s southern suburbs will need permission from Hezbollah’s media office and an accompanying escort. Please contact us for location specific information.

When to Shoot?
Lebanon’s summers (June to September) are hot and dry. Winters (December to March) are cold and wet with snowfall common in mountain areas. Spring (April / May) through to fall (October / November) are the best months to film for weather.

Lebanon hosts many cultural and music events throughout the summer months. Ramadan is observed although unlike much of the Middle East during this time, Lebanon remains open for business.

Costs & Tax Incentives
Costs. Lebanon has one of the least expensive shoot day costs in the Middle East. Our Lebanese fixer will negotiate local deals and provide the appropriate level of production support to match every budget.

Tax Incentives. At present there are no tax incentives for foreign commercials or films shooting in Lebanon.

Film Crew & Talent
Crews. The pool of local directors, directors of photography and stills photographers is small. Lebanon has some good local performance directors and a good depth of experienced key crew. Departments often cross over. All key and supporting crews speak good English, French and Arabic. Crews are non-union. Lebanon’s close proximity to Dubai and major European production centers allows easy access to those crews should you need to look further.

Contact us at Emerge Films Solutions http://emergefilmsolutions.com/country/lebanon/ if you are looking for a Beirut based director, DP, photographer, videographer (cameraman / camera operator), camera assistant (focus puller), sound operator, grip, gaffer, stylist, hair and makeup, PA / runner, production driver, or any other film crew for your shoot in Lebanon.

Talent is non-union and buyouts are negotiable. Lebanon offers a diverse cross section of Middle Eastern looking talent with some blonde, Asian, East Indian and African minorities also available, although mainly for background roles. All other talent looks are best cast abroad. Lebanon’s relatively close proximity to major European production centers and Dubai allows easy access to those pools of talent should you ever need to look further.

Lebanon Film Equipment
Most camera, grip and lighting equipment is available including Technocrane and speed cameras. Check out Gamma Engineering and Phoenix Eye for rentals. Some mounts and other specialized equipment need to be brought in from Dubai or Europe. For productions looking to bring in film equipment Lebanon is an ATA carnet country.

Art Department, Studios, Backlots, & Post Production
Art department and set construction is some of the best in the Middle East.

Studios. The best facilities are Studio Vision and Platform Studios. Facilities are often booked up by regional TV programs.

Backlots. None exist at present.

Post Production. Some good colorists and sound designers available locally but visiting productions generally post abroad.

Visas & Work Permits
Most nationalities can obtain visas on arrival allowing stays for a period of up to 1 month. Note, crew members holding passports that contain visas or entry/exit stamps for Israel will likely be refused entry into Lebanon. Visiting crews are not required to have work permits.
Transport & Accommodation
Transportation Infrastructure. Lebanon’s extensive road network is mostly in a good condition. Lebanon is a small country so most locations are a short drive away. Beirut is well serviced by several international airlines.

Accommodation. Contact us for recommended film friendly hotels in Beirut and other parts of Lebanon. For longer stays we can also organize serviced apartments.

Final Notes
Safety. See here for up to date travel advice.

Projects. For an example of TV commercials, stills campaigns, online content, corporate videos, virtual reality 360 content, feature films, TV series and documentaries shot in Lebanon.


Sources, References & Credits: Google, Wikipedia, Wikihow, Pinterest, IMDB, Linked In, Indie Wire, Film Making Stuff, Hiive, Film Daily, New York Film Academy, The Balance, The Numbers, Film Maker, TV Guide Magazine, Media Match, Quora, Creative Skill Set, Investopedia, Variety, No Film School, Daily Variety, The Film Agency, Best Sample Resume, How Stuff Works, Career Trend, Producer's Code of Credits, Producers Guild of America, Film Connection, Variety, Emerge Film Solutions, UNESCO Institute for Statistics, Armes, Roy. Arab Filmmakers of the Middle East: a Dictionary, Harabi, Najib. Knowledge Intensive Industries: Four Case Studies of Creative Industries in Arab Countries, Stone, Christopher Reed. Popular culture and nationalism in Lebanon: the Fairouz and Rahbani Nation,

THIS ARTICLE IS FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY. THE INFORMATION IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND BRUCE BISBEY MAKES NO EXPRESS OR IMPLIED REPRESENTATIONS OR WARRANTIES, INCLUDING WARRANTIES OF PERFORMANCE, MERCHANTABILITY, AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, REGARDING THIS INFORMATION. BRUCE BISBEY DOES NOT GUARANTEE THE COMPLETENESS, ACCURACY OR TIMELINESS OF THIS INFORMATION. YOUR USE OF THIS INFORMATION IS AT YOUR OWN RISK. YOU ASSUME FULL RESPONSIBILITY AND RISK OF LOSS RESULTING FROM THE USE OF THIS INFORMATION. BRUCE BISBEY WILL NOT BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, SPECIAL, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, CONSEQUENTIAL OR PUNITIVE DAMAGES OR ANY OTHER DAMAGES WHATSOEVER, WHETHER IN AN ACTION BASED UPON A STATUTE, CONTRACT, TORT (INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION NEGLIGENCE) OR OTHERWISE, RELATING TO THE USE OF THIS INFORMATION.



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