What’s screening in competition at the 2025 Saudi Film Festival

What’s screening in competition at the 2025 Saudi Film Festival
'Hobal' is set shortly before the outbreak of the Gulf War in 1990, and follows a Bedouin family living a nomadic existence in the desert. (Supplied)
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Updated 17 April 2025

What’s screening in competition at the 2025 Saudi Film Festival

What’s screening in competition at the 2025 Saudi Film Festival

DUBAI: A rundown of the Feature Narrative Film contenders at this year’s Saudi Film Festival, which runs from April 17-23. 

‘HDz’ 

Director: Abdulaziz Alshlahei 

Starring: Mila Al-Zahrani, Amal Samie, Ibrahim Al-Hasawi 

The Saudi filmmaker — whose movie “The Tambour of Retribution” was selected as the Kingdom’s entry into the 2022 Oscars and won the Special Jury Prize at the Cairo Film Festival in 2020 — has already grabbed headlines with his latest project, which is the first feature film to be shot in the Saudi megaproject NEOM. It’s set shortly before the outbreak of the Gulf War in 1990, and follows a Bedouin family living a nomadic existence in the desert. The patriarch has forbidden his family from heading into modernized cities — believing them to be dens of sin — but when his granddaughter Rifa contracts measles, her mother defies his rules to try and save her life. The film has already been a hit in : according to the Saudi Film Commission it had more than half a million cinema admissions in a little over a month following its release in January. 

‘My Driver and I’ 

Director: Ahd Kamel 

Starring: Roula Dakheelallah, Mishaal Tamer, Mustafa Shehata 

Saudi actress, writer, director and producer Kamel’s entry is a coming-of-age story set in her hometown of Jeddah in the Eighties and Nineties. It centers on the relationship between a free-spirited girl, Salma, and her family’s chauffeur, a Sudanese man named Gamar, who quickly becomes her confidant and something of a father figure to Salma, whose real dad is a businessman who shows more interest in his work than he does in his daughter. But as Salma grows up, their relationship becomes strained, as Salma feels that Gamar has overstepped his boundaries in his attempts to alter her behavior and protect her reputation.  




Saudi actress, writer, director and producer Ahd Kamel’s entry is a coming-of-age story set in her hometown of Jeddah. (Supplied)

‘Songs of Adam’ 

Director: Oday Rasheed 

Starring: Azzam Ahmed Ali, Abdul Jabber Hassan, Alaa Najm  

The Baghdad-born Arab American director blends drama and magical realism in this tale of two brothers — Adam and Ali — that begins in the 1940s. Having been told by their father to witness their grandfather’s corpse being washed before burial, Adam, then aged 12, announces that he has decided not to grow up. And as the years pass, he doesn’t. The villagers, including Ali, believe he has been cursed. Only Adam’s best friend Anki and his cousin Iman — who wasn’t allowed to witness the ritual as a child because she is a girl — see Adam’s condition as an innocence-preserving gift.  




The Baghdad-born Arab American director blends drama and magical realism in this tale of two brothers — Adam and Ali — that begins in the 1940s. (Supplied)

‘HDZ’ 

Director: Abdulmohsen Aldhabaan 

Starring: Mariam Abdulrahman, Meshal Almutairi 

Saudi writer-director Aldhabaan’s latest feature is a psychological thriller that centers on Rakan and his wife Rim, who are desperate to find their own place so that they no longer have to live with Rakan’s mother. The only issue with their supposed new home is that someone has hammered a hole into one of its walls. After the married couple have moved in, Rakan becomes increasingly distant from Rim. Through flashbacks, we begin to learn why his mood has changed, and when his mother is attacked by burglars in her house, Rakan is confronted by an unwelcome reminder of his past.  

‘Fakhr Al-Suwaidi’ 

Directors: Hisham Fathyn, Abdullah Bamajboor, Osama Salih 

Starring: Fahad Al-Mutairi, Faisal Al-Ahmari, Saeed Al-Qahtani 

Shaheen is the idealistic principal of Al-Suwaidi High School, who is searching for a way to connect with some of his students whom he believes are in danger of going astray; three students in particular: Ziyad, whose family have recently returned from America and who is feeling stifled by their expectations of him; Mazen, a restless boy prone to violent outbursts; and Saeed, who is struggling to stay on the straight and narrow and redeem his reputation as a troublemaker. Shaheen starts a sharia class, and finds himself bonding with the students, but his younger brother Moeen is unhappy about the project, which he views as a waste of the school’s overstretched budget. 

‘Session Adjourned’ 

Director: Mohammad S. S. Almujaibel 

Starring: Hind Al-Balushi, Abdullah Al-Jiran, Abdullah Al-Turkmani 

This thriller marks the return of Kuwaiti star Al-Balushi to the silver screen after nearly seven years of not starring in movies. According to a synopsis on the Ithra website, it centers around a series of crimes apparently carried out in revenge for the murder of a young boy called Fahd. At each crime scene, the only clue found is a necklace in the shape of a scorpion. The most obvious suspect would be Fahd’s father — Younis Abdul Rahman. But he committed suicide over a year before the crimes began.


Palestinian Jordanian artist Zeyne gears up for album release

Palestinian Jordanian artist Zeyne gears up for album release
Updated 12 October 2025

Palestinian Jordanian artist Zeyne gears up for album release

Palestinian Jordanian artist Zeyne gears up for album release

DUBAI: Palestinian Jordanian artist Zeyne is gearing up for the release of her album “Awda” on Oct. 16.

The singer shared the track list, including 13 songs, and also took to Instagram this week to share behind-the-scenes photographs from a recent performance in ’s AlUla.

Saudi label MDLBEAST this week revealed that the artist’s music has been submitted for consideration in four categories at next year’s Grammy Awards.

The record label submitted the songs “Asli Ana” and “Hilwa” for the Best Global Music Performance award and the Best Music Video award.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Zeyne’s most recent single “Hilwa” dropped in July and the artwork — shot by Zaid Allozi — shows three women interlocked by their braided hair.

“The image shows three generations — me, my mother and my grandmother — all connected by one continuous braid. It’s a symbol of inheritance; the quiet strength and love passed from one woman to the next,” Zeyne told Arab News at the time of the release. “The braid holds the kind of love that isn’t always spoken, but is deeply felt and remembered.”

Following Zeyne’s 2024 hit “Asli Ana,” which reimagined Arab rhythmic traditions through a futuristic lens, “Hilwa” pays homage to her mother and grandmother, whose love and wisdom deeply shaped her sense of identity. “While ‘Asli Ana’ was about resistance, ‘Hilwa’ is softer,” she said. 

Born Zein Sajdi in Amman in 1997, Zeyne was raised in a household where music and culture were key. Her father was a record collector, her mother led a dabke troupe and her sister trained as a classical pianist. Zeyne began performing aged five and was already writing her own lyrics in her teens.

Since the release of her 2021 debut single, “Minni Ana,” Zeyne has carved a singular lane in Arab pop — merging traditional Arabic sounds with modern, genre-defying production.

Earlier this year, she launched a three-stop regional mini tour, “The Golden-Hour Run,” that included a landmark performance at the OffLimits Festival in the UAE and stadium appearances as a special guest on Ed Sheeran’s Mathematics Tour in Qatar and Bahrain, where she performed to more than 65,000 people. 

She became the first female artist from the Levant to appear on the globally renowned music platform COLORS with her song “Ma Bansak,” and a viral performance in collaboration with Bottega Veneta blurred the lines between fashion, music and Palestinian resistance.


Vocalists chase singing glory as Pakistan Idol returns after 12 years

Vocalists chase singing glory as Pakistan Idol returns after 12 years
Updated 12 October 2025

Vocalists chase singing glory as Pakistan Idol returns after 12 years

Vocalists chase singing glory as Pakistan Idol returns after 12 years
  • The reality TV singing show is streaming on seven Pakistani channels simultaneously
  • Judges include Fawad Khan, Rahat Fateh Ali Khan, Bilal Maqsood and Zeb Bangash

KARACHI: Aspiring vocalists from across Pakistan lined up to chase stardom as Pakistan Idol returned to the country after a 12-year hiatus with a star-studded jury, wider reach, and a renewed promise to spotlight the country’s untapped musical talent.

Pakistan Idol is part of the global ‘Idol’ franchise, a reality television singing competition format created by British producer Simon Fuller and developed by British firm, Fremantle Limited, which also owns non-scripted formats like Got Talent and The X Factor.

The MHL Global production company, which secured rights for Pakistan Idol 2025 from Fremantle, last month announced that Badar Ikram will produce the show, with Fawad Khan, Rahat Fateh Ali Khan, former Strings band mate Bilal Maqsood and Zeb Bangash as judges.

The first episode of the show went on air on Oct. 4, followed by the second on Oct. 5., broadcast on seven Pakistani TV channels simultaneously.

“Pakistani talent is our real asset. If we don’t provide them with our platform, then it would be an unfair thing,” Rahat Fateh Ali Khan told Arab News, on the sidelines of the auditions in Karachi.

“It isn’t a good thing that the show has come back after 12 years but the best part is that we have come fully prepared this time.”

Ikram said producing the show is “an honor and a responsibility” for him.

“We are determined to deliver a show that reflects the passion, diversity, and raw talent of Pakistan,” he said in a statement prior to airing of the first episode.

“From auditions to the grand stage, our team is working tirelessly to ensure the audience experiences the magic of music and storytelling at a truly global standard.”

The first edition of Pakistan Idol aired in Dec. 2013, featuring Bushra Ansari, Hadiqa Kiani and Ali Azmat as judges.

Auditions of participants from Karachi, Lahore, Islamabad, Rawalpindi, Multan and Sukkur are being aired since Saturday, Oct. 4, trying to make it to the top 30 contestants that will eventually lead to 16 finalists on the show.

Maham Tahir, who hails from the Rahim Yar Khan district, said her audition experience was “really good” and she found the judges to be “kind.”

“[Platforms like Pakistan Idol] are very important for us. Singers like myself, who aren’t valued in the world on a big level, are valued by platforms like these,” Tahir, a student of Lahore’s GC University who was among the top 30 contestants, told Arab News.

“I am fortunate [to make it to the next round]. It’s a miracle for me.”

Bangash, the only woman on the judges’ panel, said they were also looking for females as much as they were looking for male singers.

“Although, I have to say that there are more contestants that are men,” she said, “but that has nothing to do with the platform. I think, as the seasons keep progressing, we’re going to have more and more interest from women.”

Bangash shared they were judging the performances based on a number of things.

“We are trying to be as transparent as we can but at the end of the day, I say that judging music is an interesting idea to begin with because it’s creative expression,” she said. “So, sometimes, it’s subjective, sometimes it’s just the moment [and] sometimes it’s just the song selection.”

Pakistan Idol Season 2 will also be streamed worldwide via UAE-based platform, Begin, that has secured the rights for the show. Viewers in , UAE, Canada and the US will be able to watch it on the Begin app. For those based in the UK, Germany, India, Australia, South Africa and Nigeria, the show can be watched directly via begin.watch.

“The international distribution of Pakistan Idol demonstrates how far South Asian entertainment has come in reaching global audiences,” MHL Global Director Zoya Merchant told Arab News.

“We are proud to see a format rooted in local culture and talent become accessible to viewers worldwide. This collaboration with Begin represents an important step toward integrating Pakistani creativity into the broader entertainment ecosystem.”


Frieze to launch Abu Dhabi art fair in 2026

Frieze to launch Abu Dhabi art fair in 2026
Updated 11 October 2025

Frieze to launch Abu Dhabi art fair in 2026

Frieze to launch Abu Dhabi art fair in 2026

DUBAI: Leading art organization Frieze announced this week its expansion into the Gulf region with the launch of Frieze Abu Dhabi, scheduled to debut in November 2026.

Under a new partnership between the Abu Dhabi Department of Culture and Tourism and Frieze, Abu Dhabi’s flagship art fair will be rebranded as Frieze Abu Dhabi.

The change marks a new phase for Abu Dhabi Art, which has been held annually since 2007 and established itself as a key fixture on the region’s art calendar.

The new fair will represent Frieze’s first venture in the Middle East and its eighth international edition. The organization currently stages two editions in London, along with annual fairs in New York, Los Angeles and Seoul, as well as The Armory Show in New York and Expo Chicago.
 


REVIEW: ‘Chad Powers’ — Glen Powell’s charm rescues Disney’s sports comedy

REVIEW: ‘Chad Powers’ — Glen Powell’s charm rescues Disney’s sports comedy
Updated 11 October 2025

REVIEW: ‘Chad Powers’ — Glen Powell’s charm rescues Disney’s sports comedy

REVIEW: ‘Chad Powers’ — Glen Powell’s charm rescues Disney’s sports comedy

DUBAI: The race for the next “Ted Lasso” continues with “Chad Powers,” which seems like it was put together by a bunch of Disney execs based on focus-group results. Sports? Check (American football). Humor? Check. Recognizable storyline that plays well across demographics? Check. Recognizable star who plays well across demographics? Double-check (Glen Powell plays two roles.)

Fortunately, “Chad Powers” is not as horrific as that scenario sounds. And that’s largely due to the undeniable charisma of its star and co-creator. Powell brings his A-game to a pretty flimsy and derivative plot, and the result is a surprisingly layered take on an old idea.

Powell is Russ Holliday, star quarterback at a major US college whose talent is matched by his narcissism. He manages to ruin his chances of a pro career by melting down in spectacular fashion at a televised championship game, punching a fan into a wheelchair-bound kid with cancer.

Time passes and Holliday is working for his dad — a prosthetics specialist for Hollywood movies with whom he has a shaky relationship at best. Russ is asked to deliver some of said prosthetics to a movie studio. On his drive there, he sees (a) a report that the floundering South Georgia Catfish are holding an open call for a new quarterback and (b) a poster for “Mrs. Doubtfire” (in which Robin Williams’ character disguises himself as an old Scottish woman to maintain contact with his kids following the breakdown of his marriage). You see where this is going?

You do.

Holliday heads to South Georgia, where he dons a wig and prosthetics and becomes Chad Powers, a bumpkin who has rarely left the house at which he was home-schooled (a ruse dreamed up with the help of the team’s mascot, Danny — the only person who knows Chad is really Russ). Cue various set-pieces in which Chad must avoid losing his prosthetics or wig.

And Russ needs not only to maintain his disguise, but to nurture a character entirely unlike his own — i.e. humble, likeable, and a team player. Powell convinces both as the preening braggard Russ and the shy, mumbling Chad.

Along the way, of course, lessons are learned and opportunities open up, including a possible romance with the head coach’s daughter, Ricky (Perry Mattfeld). Which sounds cheesy, but the show manages — sometimes — to undercut its often-easy choices with an uneasy tension that makes “Chad Powers” more than the sum of its unimaginative parts.


Bella Hadid rings in 29 with star-studded tributes

Bella Hadid rings in 29 with star-studded tributes
Updated 11 October 2025

Bella Hadid rings in 29 with star-studded tributes

Bella Hadid rings in 29 with star-studded tributes

DUBAI: Birthday tributes poured in for model Bella Hadid this week as the catwalk star marked her 29th birthday.

“IT’S @bellahadid DAY,” her sister and fellow model Gigi Hadid wrote on Instagram Stories, sharing a throwback photo of the sisters as toddlers.

In another slide, Gigi posted a black-and-white snapshot of herself with Bella, both wearing matching leather jackets in different colors. “She’s our walking heart,” she wrote.

Instagram/ @gigihadid

Bella’s friends and family also took to Instagram to celebrate the occasion, including Italian designer Donatella Versace, model and entrepreneur Hailey Bieber, filmmaker Logan Mays, Sudanese model and actress Aweng Ade-Chuol, as well as her relatives — sister Alana Hadid, father Mohamed Hadid and mother Yolanda Hadid.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

The American model of Dutch and Palestinian heritage recently returned to work after undergoing treatment for Lyme disease.

In September, she revealed she had stepped away from social media and the runway to receive treatment for the illness, and has previously spoken about her ongoing battle with the condition, which she has had since the age of 16, noting symptoms such as headaches, brain fog, light and noise sensitivity, inflammation and joint pain.

Lyme disease can also cause depression, anxiety and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, which Bella has also reportedly suffered from. The condition is a bacterial infection that can spread to humans through infected ticks.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Her first runway appearance since her recovery took place last month, when she walked for Saint Laurent during Paris Fashion Week.

The model wore a metallic mustard-yellow ensemble with a loose, billowing silhouette. The look featured a long-sleeved, gathered top with a high round neckline, paired with matching knee-length shorts.

A textured belt in the same shade cinched the waist, adding structure to the voluminous fabric. The outfit was styled with sheer black tights and pointed black heels, along with oversized brown sunglasses and statement earrings.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

This week, she also shared her latest campaign images for Chopard, wearing the brand’s L’Heure du Diamant watch, necklace and earrings paired with a form-fitting purple turtleneck dress.

Bella has a long-standing relationship with Chopard. In 2017, she became one of the faces of the brand’s high jewelry collections.

Since then, she has appeared in multiple campaigns and frequently wears Chopard pieces at major international events, including the Cannes Film Festival, the Met Gala and Paris Fashion Week.