3000 Nights Gains Three International Awards at at Film Festivals in Malmo, Rotterdam and Minnesota

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The Best Feature Film and Two Audience Awards

3000 Nights Gains Three International Awards at at Film Festivals in Malmo, Rotterdam and Minnesota


Palestinian filmmaker Mai Masri's 3000 Nights continues on collecting awards from international film festivals; most recently the film has won the Best Feature Film Award at the Malmo Arab Film Festival
in Sweden, Audience Award at the Arab Camera Festival- Rotterdam, and another Audience Award at the Mizna's Twin Cities Arab Film Festival in Minnesota, US. By winning these, 3000 Nights has reached 11 awards in total throughout its successful tours.

The film is currently competing within the Official Competition for Feature Films at the 27th Carthage Film Festival (JCC)(October 28 - November 5). In 2011, 3000 Nights won the Carthage Film Festival Grant Award for Best Script during its development stage.

3000 Nights was selected by an independent committee assigned by the Royal Film Commission - Jordan, the official entity to submit Jordan's official submission to the Academy Award's for Best Foreign-language Film category. The competing films considered for this category will be narrowed down and the shortlisted films will be announced in the beginning of next December. The shortlist will be further whittled down to the official nominees that will be revealed in January 2017 ahead of the award ceremony that is slated to take place in February.

The film won eight awards: the TaoEdu Young Prize at Taormina Film Festival in Italy, the Youth Jury Award at the International Film Festival and Forum for Human Rights, Switzerland, and the Audience Award at The Annonay International Film Festival in France. The film also won the Special Jury Award at Washington, DC International Film Festival (Filmfest DC), the Jury Award at the 8th Women's International Film and Television Showcase (The WIFTS), USA, the Meeting Point Audience Award at the 60th Valladolid International Film Festival in Spain, as well as the Youth Jury Award and the Women's Jury Award at the Paysages des Cineastes in France.

The film's world premiere was held at the Toronto International Film Festival, and it was also screened in the US within at the Palm Springs International Film Festival in California. The film competed also at Busan International Film Festival in South Korea and had a series of full-house screenings at BFI London Film Festival and Rotterdam Arab Film Festival.

3000 Nights is a co-production between Jordan, Palestine, France, UAE, Qatar and Lebanon. MAD Solutions is in charge of the distribution of the film in the Arab world. 3000 Nights tells the story of a young Palestinian school teacher who gives birth to her son in an Israeli prison, where she fights to protect him, survive and maintain hope. The film stars Maisa Abdelhadi, Nadera Omran, Raida Adon, Rakeen Saad, Abeer Haddad, Anahid Fayad, Haifa Al Agha, Khitam Edelbi and Hana Chamoun.

Mai Masri is a Palestinian filmmaker. She studied film at UC Berkeley and San Francisco State University (USA) where she graduated with a BA degree. Her rich and extensive filmography includes many documentaries focusing on the humanity and resilience of ordinary people characterized with humanistic elements, through which she won over 60 awards at international film festivals, such as Under the Rubble (1983), Wild Flowers: Women of South Lebanon (1986), War Generation Beirut (1998), Children of Fire (1990), Suspended Dreams (1992), Children of Shatila (1998), HananAshrawi: A Woman of her Time (1995), Frontiers of Dreams and Fears (2001), Beirut Diaries: Truth, Lies and Videos (2006) and 33 Days (2007).