Saudi
director al-Mansour eyes female empowerment in 'The
Perfect Candidate'
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[August 30, 2019]
By Sarah Mills and Marie-Louise Gumuchian
VENICE, Italy (Reuters) - A
young Saudi Arabian female doctor seeks to change
conservative mindsets in "A Perfect Candidate", a tale
of a woman tackling gender-based obstacles while running
for local office.
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The movie by Haifaa al-Mansour, one of only two female directors
in the 21-strong competition line-up at the Venice Film
Festival, reflects recent changes in the kingdom's heavily
criticized guardianship system, beginning with protagonist
Maryam driving in her car.
When a planned trip to Dubai falls apart, Maryam ends up putting
her name down to run for municipal council. Disheartened by the
lack of will to pave a road to her medical center, Maryam makes
it her election promise to do so herself if she wins.
Despite facing opposition and gender-based rules, Maryam
launches her campaign with the help of her sisters while their
widower musician father is away, embarking on a journey Mansour
said she hoped sends a message of empowerment to Saudi Arabian
women.
"I personally want more women to participate in politics and be
active members in society and it's going to be hard because
societies are still conservative and families don't want women
to take office or be in public," Mansour told a news conference
on Thursday.
"But there is a momentum change in Saudi Arabia now and it is a
chance of women to take advantage of it."
Earlier this month, Saudi Arabia ended travel restrictions for
adult women, allowing them to do so without permission as well
as giving them more control over family matters, chipping away
at male guardianship rules that have long been criticized
internationally.
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"Our womanhood should transcend beyond race and gender and
countries. We should come together as women and really support each
other and believe in each other," Mansour said.
Mansour, whose past works include "Wadjda" and the English-language
"Mary Shelley", peppers her film with plenty of cultural references
and love songs performed at weddings or by Maryam's oud-playing
father with his band while on tour.
Asked about the criticism Venice Film Festival organisers have faced
over the small number of women directors in the running for the top
Golden Lion prize, Mansour said: "Definitely I think festivals
should support female directors.
"But I think the cycle starts really from financing. It's a symptom
and maybe festivals should put pressure on producing companies."
(Reporting by Marie-Louise Gumuchian and Sarah Mills; Editing by
Alexandra Hudson)
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