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SAINT OMER
Drama | Running Time: 122 minutes
2022 / French dialogue
Country: France
Directed by: Alice DiopDirected by: Alice Diop
PG12
Alice Diop
The screenwriter and director was born in 1979. She toured international festivals with her short and medium-length films, reaping awards, including the César for Best Short Film in 2017. Her feature length documentary “We” (2021) won the Best Documentary Award as well as Best Film in the Encounters section at the Berlinale.

SHOWTIME
Tue 06 Dec | 9:30 PM - 11:37 PM
VOX Cinema 1 Red Sea Mall
Price: 40 SAR
VOX Cinema 1 Red Sea Mall
Price: 40 SAR
Thu 08 Dec | 5:45 PM - 7:52 PM
VOX Cinema 6 Red Sea Mall
Price: 40 SAR
VOX Cinema 6 Red Sea Mall
Price: 40 SAR
Producer
Toufik Ayadi, Christophe Barral
Cast
Kayije Kagame, Guslagie Malanda, Valérie Dréville, Aurélia Petit, Xavier Maly, Robert Cantarella, Salimata Kamate, Thomas De Pourquery, Adama Diallo Tamba, Mariam Diop, Dado Diop
Scriptwriter
Alice Diop, Amrita David, Marie Ndiaye
Middle East Distribution
TeleView International, Front Row Filmed Entertainment
Toufik Ayadi, Christophe Barral
Cast
Kayije Kagame, Guslagie Malanda, Valérie Dréville, Aurélia Petit, Xavier Maly, Robert Cantarella, Salimata Kamate, Thomas De Pourquery, Adama Diallo Tamba, Mariam Diop, Dado Diop
Scriptwriter
Alice Diop, Amrita David, Marie Ndiaye
Middle East Distribution
TeleView International, Front Row Filmed Entertainment
In 2013, all of France was captivated by the trial of a brilliant Senegalese student who had drowned her child in the sea near the town of Saint-Omer, a seemingly inexplicable act she blamed on sorcery. French-Senegalese documentary maker Alice Diop, who was pregnant herself at the time, spent weeks in the courtroom watching the trial unfold, an experience she has adapted as her first fiction film. This is not a conventional courtroom drama. Rama (Kayije Kagame) is a literary academic writing a paper on Medea; she can claim a professional interest. But as she watches Laurence (the magnetic Guslagie Malanda) speak, she finds herself identifying with this young woman, despite what she has done; she recognises her experience of having her identity and agency subtly denied by others, including this court. Diop’s account of the trial is ultimately an inquiry into how we construct our stories, both for others and for ourselves.