Mohamed Al-Daradji

Mohamed Al-Darraji (Arabic: محمد الدراجي) (born 6 August 1978 in Baghdad, Iraq) is an Iraqi-Dutch film director.

He studied theater in Iraq, and cinematography and directing in England. He is known for his drama films, which focus on political affairs in the Middle East and their effects on interpersonal relationships.

Mohamed Al-Daradji
Mohamed Al-Daradji

Personal life

Al-Daradji was born and raised in Iraq. His aunt had lost a son in the Iran–Iraq War, and he cites her grief as a motivation for his films, which address both the terrible suffering and the hopefulness for the future felt by many Iraqis. In 1995, he fled to the Netherlands: “And now I am proud. [...] I am a refugee who came to Holland fifteen years ago, with one pair of trousers, dirty clothes, and one pair of shoes. I will tell myself this [...] and I will tell that to my family. I am proud of Holland that gave me this great energy and this great opportunity to find myself - that is really important for me.”

As of May 2008, Al-Daradji is unmarried and does not have children.

Education and career

His first job in the Netherlands was as a cameraman. Later he studied at Leeds Beckett University's Northern Film School in Leeds, UK where he obtained master's degrees in Cinematography and Directing. During his graduate studies, he created many short films and commercials, which earned him the prestigious Kodak Student Commercial Award for Cinematography.

In 2003, he returned to Baghdad, Iraq to begin work on his first feature film Ahlaam which he filmed over in a four-month period during the war. Filming was difficult as electricity would often cut out from time to time. Towards the end of filming, he and three members of his crew were kidnapped but managed to escape being killed by insurgents, who accused them of making a propaganda film in support of the U.S.-backed Iraqi government. The captors were preparing to shoot them before they fled from the sound of police sirens. On the same day, they were said to have been abducted again from a Baghdad hospital by another group of gunmen who beat them up and then turned them over to the U.S. military, who held them in harsh conditions for six days on the suspicion that they were filming insurgent attacks for Al Qaida. Ahlaam screened at more than 125 international film festivals and received more than 22 awards, as well as Academy Award and Golden Globe consideration.

In 2008, Al-Daradji became a Sundance fellow.

Al-Daradji again came into prominence upon release of his 2009 drama Son of Babylon, which premiered at the Middle East International Film Festival (now known as the Abu Dhabi Film Festival) and was the first feature film to be financially supported by the festival. It was developed through the Sundance Institute. The film made its world premiere at the film festival Berlinale2010 (Berlin International Film Festival), and earned him Variety magazine's Middle East Filmmaker of the Year award, Berlin's Amnesty Award and Peace Prize, the NETPAC Award at Karlovy Vary International Film Festival, and a special mention at Edinburgh International Film Festival. The film was selected as the Iraqi entry for the 2011 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language film nominations, however it did not make the final shortlist. Tim Gray, editor of Variety, said the following upon naming Al-Daradji the Middle East Filmmaker of the Year: "We wanted to honour Mohamed Al Daradji, not because he is a great Middle Eastern filmmaker, but because he is simply a great filmmaker."

Filmography

Awards

References

Tags:

Mohamed Al-Daradji Personal lifeMohamed Al-Daradji Education and careerMohamed Al-Daradji FilmographyMohamed Al-Daradji Awards[3]Mohamed Al-DaradjiArabicBaghdadIraqIraqi Dutch

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

Prince George of WalesIF (film)House (TV series)Aaron MotenKim Ji-won (actress)AadhaarHugh JackmanStephen HawkingRentAHitman.comDown syndromeMalala YousafzaiSunrisers HyderabadAnna SawaiGitHubList of Marvel Cinematic Universe filmsJeremie FrimpongSofía VergaraHamasRipley (TV series)Google ScholarBenjamin FranklinLeonardo da VinciDogNational Day of PrayerLinkedInElena RybakinaLisa Marie PresleyVietnam WarGenghis KhanWatts family murdersEFL ChampionshipLiam NeesonThe Outsider (miniseries)FlipkartKentucky DerbyJustin TimberlakeAmazon (company)IndiaFoolish (Ashanti song)Robert KraftNullList of 9-1-1 episodesKirsten DunstTom HollandThe Masked Singer (American TV series) season 11Road House (2024 film)Indian National CongressThe Pirate BayPriscilla PresleyHong KongIntifadaAmar Singh Chamkila (film)BridgertonAnunnakiLate Night with the DevilDaya (singer)Kristen StewartCaliforniaBruce WillisFallout 4Cosmo JarvisJ. K. RowlingDevin HaneyThe Garfield MovieList of NBA championsLovely RunnerParis Saint-Germain F.C.United Arab EmiratesCarey MulliganCatherine, Princess of WalesShaquille O'NealBlake LivelyKingdom of the Planet of the ApesWorld Snooker ChampionshipMontserratUEFA Europa League🡆 More