Movie Motion has purchased North American rights to “Bouchra,” a fusion of queer storytelling and experimental animation, which debuted at Toronto within the Platform part.
“Bouchra” is directed by a duo of visible artists, Orian Barki and Meriem Bennani, who final collaborated on “2 Lizards,” a pandemic-era collection now held within the everlasting collections of the Museum of Trendy Artwork and the Whitney Museum of American Artwork.
Movie Motion will carry “Bouchra” to theaters in 2026, earlier than increasing the movie’s attain throughout main VOD and digital platforms and the house leisure market.
Set between Morocco and New York Metropolis, “Bouchra” follows a Moroccan filmmaker residing in New York who finds herself caught in a artistic disaster. “A cellphone name along with her mom, Aïcha, in Casablanca triggers a cascade of recollections — some tender, some fraught — opening a luminous pathway by daughterhood, household bonds, diasporic longing, and the exhilarating, difficult freedom of queer love,” reads the synopsis.
The characteristic has earned important laurels, together with the Gold Q-Hugo on the Chicago Worldwide Movie Pageant.
“‘Bouchra’ is a exceptional accomplishment — piercing in its emotion, gorgeous in its visible creativeness, and deeply resonant in its portrait of household and id,” mentioned Michael Rosenberg, Movie Motion’s president, who collectively introduced the acquisition with Ola Byszuk of Fortunate Quantity, which handles worldwide gross sales on “Bouchra.”
“Orian and Meriem have created a one-of-a-kind animated characteristic that pushes arthouse storytelling into new territory. It’s a privilege to share this daring and important movie with audiences all through North America,” Rosenberg added.
Other than “Bouchra,” Movie Motion has additionally lately acquired Chie Hayakawa’s award-winning “Renoir,” which competed at this yr’s Cannes; Dominik Moll’s Palme d’Or-nominated police procedural, “Case 137,” one other Cannes competitors choice; “Residing the Land,” Huo Meng’s Berlinale Silver Bear-winner; and “An American Pastoral” from French filmmaker Auberi Edler, winner of the most effective directing award at IDFA.



















