Saudi director blazes a trail with coming-of-age tale ‘Wadjda’

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TELLURIDE, Colo. (MCT) — Wearing high-top tennis shoes and headphones, 11-year-old Wadjda doesn’t look like much of a revolutionary.

But in filmmaker Haifaa Mansour’s new Saudi Arabian movie, the young girl is just that — as is Mansour herself.
Having had its North American premiere at the just-concluded Telluride Film Festival, “Wadjda” has become one of the event’s most talked-about movies, as much as for what’s on screen as for how the story was brought to the screen.

The first Saudi feature directed by a woman, “Wadjda” was made entirely inside the repressive country. Owing to strict religious edicts, Mansour occasionally had to direct her actors from inside a van some 100 feet from her set, lest she be seen mingling with men, and she received death threats for an earlier documentary that focused on young women like Wadjda who are willing to buck Islamic tradition.

As soon as “Wadjda” starts, it’s clear the title character (played by Waad Mohammed) is unlike many of her middle-school peers. She listens to Grouplove on one of her mixtapes, doesn’t always wear the proper head scarf and has a secret side business weaving bracelets for classmates. Wadjda, who lives with her mother and frequently absent father, spends almost as much time in the school administration offices as in the classroom. Wadjda’s primary goal is saving enough money to buy a bike, even though (or perhaps because) she’s been told that girls don’t ride bikes or do much of anything else that can be seen by men.

When Wadjda hears of a school Koran competition whose prize money will allow her to purchase her bike, she suddenly becomes a devoted student. The film is looking for a U.S. theatrical distributor. As written and directed by the 38-year-old Mansour, educated in Cairo and Sydney, Australia, Wadjda is a familiarly disobedient pre-teen. Yet because her rebellion unfolds inside one of the world’s most authoritarian regimes — so strict that cinemas are banned, meaning “Wadjda” likely will never be screened in its native land — even a small act of defiance looks much larger in context. Mansour, married to an American diplomat with whom she lives in Bahrain, said she intentionally avoided making a didactic drama and chose to film inside the country even though it made her job tougher.

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