The Cairo Intl. Movie Competition opened this 12 months not by wanting outward, however inward, highlighting the expansive archive of Egyptian classics present process restoration. Through the ceremony, audiences have been proven putting before-and-after footage of restored movies reminiscent of Hossam El Din Mostafa’s “A Crime in a Quiet Neighborhood” and Kamal Al-Sheikh’s “Sundown and Dawn,” drawing audible reactions as decades-old photographs re-emerged with new readability and texture. For CIFF president Hussein Fahmi, the second signaled a renewed dedication to not solely safeguarding, however reinvigorating Egypt’s cinematic heritage.
The restoration program, spearheaded in partnership with Egypt’s Ministry of Tradition-affiliated Holding Firm for Funding within the fields of Tradition and Cinema, marks one of the crucial formidable archival efforts in regional historical past. Fahmi mentioned the push stemmed from each cultural accountability and the dramatic shift in filmmaking applied sciences. “The know-how has modified, so I needed to change with it.”
This 12 months’s version showcased 21 newly restored titles, all of which now embrace English subtitles to succeed in worldwide viewers. However the initiative doesn’t finish with competition screenings. “It’s ineffective in case you restore the movies and display screen them throughout the competition, after which no person else sees them,” Fahmi mentioned throughout a press roundtable. To make sure long-term entry, CIFF and the Holding Firm are growing a devoted digital platform for Egyptian classics. “On that platform you may watch all these motion pictures,” he shared, noting that youthful cinephiles usually haven’t any entry level into the nation’s earlier movie custom.
“Sundown and Dawn” (Courtesy of Cairo Movie Competition)
The initiative isn’t solely new; CIFF started restoring and presenting heritage titles in latest editions, steadily increasing the hassle into the large-scale program unveiled this 12 months.
The side-by-side restoration footage performed on the opening ceremony sparked enthusiasm amongst competition visitors, underscoring the sophistication of Egypt’s studio period and the craftsmanship that, as Fahmi put it, stood “parallel with the American cinema, with the European cinema” in its time.
Whereas the primary restored batch marks a milestone, the size of the work forward stays staggering. “Now we have 1,300 motion pictures to be restored,” Fahmi acknowledged. Nonetheless, he sees the scale of the archive as a long-term alternative. As soon as digitized and out there, the gathering may kind one of the crucial complete archives of Arab cinema anyplace on the planet. “If we have now all these numbers, we will have a unbelievable platform, with a variety of movies,” he emphasised.
Fahmi positioned the restoration effort inside a bigger reflection on Egypt’s shifting function in regional manufacturing. The nation as soon as produced round 60 movies yearly and exported them throughout the Center East and North Africa. Lately, political turmoil, market losses in neighboring international locations, and the pandemic have introduced output all the way down to a median of 16 movies a 12 months.
Even so, he insists that Egyptian cinema maintains a deeply recognizable id. “While you watch an Egyptian movie, you already know that is Egyptian cinema,” he mentioned. Its rhythm, themes, and cultural grounding, he argues, are what give it an everlasting worldwide attraction: “The extra worldwide you develop into, it’s since you’re deriving from your personal society, your personal tradition.”
For Fahmi, the restoration program just isn’t solely about preservation however about restoring a sort of emotional filmmaking he feels is more and more lacking from mainstream cinema. “The drawback in what’s taking place in the present day is that when watching movies, we’re not a part of the movie,” the veteran actor famous. “The movies that we made had lots of emotions and feelings. You linked to the characters.”
He hopes that reintroducing Egypt’s traditional cinema, rooted in character, temper, and emotional proximity, will encourage youthful filmmakers to reconnect with storytelling anchored in humanity fairly than pure spectacle.
Amid rising competitors from regional festivals, Fahmi emphasised the necessity for CIFF to stay “younger in spirit,” even because it reaches its forty sixth version. Reviving the nationwide archive, he believes, is likely one of the strongest methods to take action by preserving historical past whereas giving new filmmakers a basis on which to construct.

“A Crime in a Quiet Neighborhood” (Courtesy of Cairo Movie Competition)


















