Ameer Fakher Eldin’s second feature film YUNAN, a co-production between Germany, Canada, Italy, Palestine, Qatar, Jordan, and Saudi Arabia, has won this year’s Arab Critics' Award for European Films. The award, now in its seventh edition, is presented by European Film Promotion (EFP) in collaboration with the Arab Cinema Center (ACC).
The announcement was made during the award ceremony at the El Gouna Film Festival on the evening of 18 October. Director Ameer Fakher Eldin, who was unable to attend the festival in person unfortunately, sent a video message in which he thanked the jury, the ACC, and EFP for what he called a “beautiful recognition.” He added: “To see YUNAN now embraced by Arab critics as well feels profoundly moving to me. In a way, maybe it means the film has finally found its way home.” Fakher Eldin also expressed his gratitude to his main producer and longtime collaborator Dorothe Beinemeier (Red Balloon Film), who accepted the award on-site in El Gouna: “YUNAN is Ameer Fakher Eldin's second feature film. Like his first film THE STRANGER, it is a slow, silent and melancholic piece. Ameer’s stories are not loud but told in the most subtle and poetic ways and are deeply touching. His films slow me down, they force me to take time and think and digest what I see. His films seem to transform every time I watch them. But what happens is that the films are so rich that I just find a new angle every time, another layer. Ameer is just a brilliant observer and storyteller, a very old and wise soul in a young man’s body. I am very much looking forward to producing the third film of our trilogy “
YUNAN follows an Arab man who arrives on a remote island in the North Sea intending to end his life. Instead, he is confronted by its conservative, marginalized German community and the overwhelming force of nature, encounters that unsettle his resolve and gradually reshape his perspective. What begins as an act of solitude unfolds into an unexpected encounter with both people and places gradually evolving into a quiet yet intense philosophical exchange that unearths themes of displacement, trauma and renewal. Shot against the stark beauty of windswept Nordic landscapes, YUNAN conjures a haunting sense of emotional exile that mirrors the protagonist’s inner journey. Fakher Eldin explains that he sought to explore the void left when familiarity dissolves, when the sense of home and belonging shatters and only silence remains.
The film was part of this year’s Berlinale Competition and was awarded the Golden Firebird Award Best Actor (Georges Khabbaz) and Best Actress Award (Hanna Schygulla) at the Hong Kong International Film Festival. YUNAN was produced by delegate producer Dorothe Beinemeier from Red Balloon Film / Hamburg,Germany together with Microclimat Film (CA) and Intramovies (IT). Co-producers are Fresco Films, Metafora Productions and Tabi360. Its world sales are handled by Intramovies and Mad Solutions is handling Mena sales.