release date June 15 2024
Mo Harawe's Somali debut feature THE VILLAGE NEXT TO PARADISE dazzles at Cannes
Mo Harawe's feature debut film THE VILLAGE NEXT TO PARADISE enjoyed widespread popularity and packed screenings at the 77th Cannes Film Festival, where it held its world premiere at the festival's Un Certain Regard.
 
With fever-pitch hype surrounding Mo Harawe's THE VILLAGE NEXT TO PARADISE, public dignitaries, A-list celebrities, critics, and international media figures flocked to watch the highly-anticipated film, with the general audience hailing both the film and its director, both of which got a standing ovation after the premiere’s conclusion.
 
THE VILLAGE NEXT TO PARADISE — the first Somali film to grace the hallowed screens of Cannes — stars Ahmed Ali Farah, Anab Ahmed Ibrahim, and Ahmed Mohamud Saleban.
 
Within the film's windswept landscapes of a Somali village emerges a newly assembled family's tale; one in which they must navigate between diverse dreams amidst society's complex weave. Viewers are treated to the village's charming heart, immersed in the lives of the residents as they pursue their hopes against the rolling tides.
 
Directed and written by Mo Harawe, THE VILLAGE NEXT TO PARADISE is edited by Joana Scrinzi and lensed by Mostafa El Kashef, who captivated Cannes’ audiences last year with his sensational short film I PROMISE YOU PARADISE, which won the festival's Critics' Week Rail d'Or for Best Short Film — making history as the first Egyptian film to win this award — and the Valbonne Audience Award.
 
The film is also edited by Joana Scrinzi, who received the Best Film Editing prize from the Austrian Film Award for her multi-award-winning film GREAT FREEDOM, with Nuur Abdulkadir serving as production designer.
 
The VILLAGE NEXT TO PARADISE is an international co-production that includes FreibeuterFilm (Austria), Kazak Productions (France), Niko Film (Germany), and Maanmaal ACC (Somalia), with Totem Films handling international sales and Jour2Fête responsible for international distribution, while MAD Solutions’ sales arm MAD Distribution is in charge of the film’s distribution and sales rights in the MENA region.
 
Developed at the Torino Film Script Lab, the film received a post-production prize from the Atlas Workshops of the Marrakech Film Festival and a Locarno Industry award.
 
Born in Mogadishu, Mo Harawe is a Berlinale Talents alumni who won a prestigious scholarship from the Austrian Federal Ministry for the Arts in 2019 and has been studying for a master’s degree in Visual Communication at the Art University in Kassel since 2020.
 
His filmography includes several compelling short films. Among them are LIFE ON THE HORN, which received a Special Mention at the Locarno Film Festival and Best Short Film award at the Carthage Film Festival, and WILL MY PARENTS COME AND SEE ME, which celebrated its world premiere at Berlinale Shorts and won the Grand Prix at the Clermont-Ferrand International Short Film Festival.
 
Founded in 2010, MAD Solutions boasts a rights library of more than 500 film titles and is prolific in the financing, production, packaging, sales, marketing, and releasing of Arab entertainment that spans the gamut from festival prize-winners to commercial blockbusters.
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