Jérôme Cohen-Olivar

Jérôme Cohen-Olivar (born 1964) is a Moroccan-French film director, best known for Kandisha (2008), a fantasy film inspired by the myth of Aicha Kandicha.

Life

Cohen-Olivar mostly grew up in Morocco, where he made movies on super 8mm film, before moving to Los Angeles. Susan Susan, his first short film, was a satire about secret immigration to the United States, bought by Disney for about $300,000.[1]

The Midnight Orchestra, a comedy based around the story of a man travelling to Morocco to revive his father's orchestra, examined the experiences of Jews leaving Morocco.[2] It won the Prize of the Ecumenical Jury at Montreal World Film Festival in 2015.[3]

Works

  • Susan Susan, 1987 (short)
  • Cool Crime, 1999
  • Kandisha, 2008
  • The Midnight Orchestra (L'orchestre de minuit), 2015
  • The 16th Episode / Little Horror Movie, 2018
gollark: You could argue that only the current ones are stable, but this is visibly wrong.
gollark: "Centrists" in our society hold views which are very weird compared to those of "centrists" in the past or possibly some other countries.
gollark: Centrism is relative.
gollark: I see. Still, the answer is yes according to basically all ethical theories.
gollark: Wait. Do you mean "is (living morally) right" or "is living (morally right)"?

References

  1. Jérôme Cohen-Olivar, New York Sephardi Film Festival 2019. Accessed 9 February 2019.
  2. ”Midnight Orchestra: Coexistence between Jews and Moslem Moroccans and the Memory resilience, African Bulletin, 26 January 2016.
  3. Ikram Bellarabi, Routes and Roots: The Representations of the Jewish Returnees on the Moroccan Big Screen, BA Thesis, Mohammed V University in Rabat, 2016/17.
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