Nation Estate

Nation Estate
Nation Estate
Directed by Larissa Sansour
Produced by

Morten Revsgaard Frederiksen

Beofilm Productions ApS
Written by Søren Lind
Starring
  • Larissa Sansour
  • Leila Sansour
  • Maxim Sansour
Music by Aida Nadeem
Cinematography Jesper Tøffner
Edited by William Dybeck Sorensen
Release dates
2013
Running time
9 minutes
Country Palestine/Denmark
Language

Arabic/English

IMDb.com

Nation Estate is a 2013 Palestinian movie directed by Larissa Sansour. It is a sci-fi short film that depicts Palestine as a skyscraper, with each floor representing a city in Palestine. The film garnered attention when it was removed from a competition at the Musée de l'Elysée due to its political connotations.[1]

Plot

The film starts with a pregnant woman arriving at a train station. She makes her way up an escalator with a travel bag in hand. At the top of the escalator she uses a fingerprint and retinal scan to enter a lobby and walks over to the elevators. As she pushes the button, she looks over to a poster on the wall that reads "Nation Estate: Living the High Life". Next to the elevator is a directory for the building floors. Each floor is described as a city or area in Palestine. In the elevator, advertisements play on a television screen. The advertisements seems to address different social and political issues that Palestinians face today, such as water supply, food and travelling restrictions. The first stop the elevator makes is on the 13th floor, Jerusalem. As two other 'travelers' make their way off the elevator, you can see the Al-Aqsa Mosque. The next stop is Bethlehem. As the woman steps off the elevator and walks away, the city's old architecture can be seen as the basis for the floor. She walks into a tunnel that seems to be authentic stone and mortar from the outside, but is more modern on the inside. She stops at a door, and using a keycard in the form of a Palestinian flag, she opens up the door to an apartment. She sets the keycard down, and picks up a watering can. She heads over to a window, and in front of the window, there is a tree growing out of the ground and she waters it. Afterwards, she heads over to a cabinet and opens it up, revealing multicolored cans. When she grabs one and looks at it, it has a label that says 'Mloukhieh', a food native to the Middle East and North Africa. She returns the can and reaches for another, this time it is 'Marmaon'. She heats it up using a fingerprint and pours it out into a bowl, along with other food. She sets it down on the table and makes her way to the window. After pressing a button on the wall, the view changes into one of Jerusalem. The woman holds her belly as she looks on to the city.

Controversy

The director, Larissa Sansour, had released the movie along with a photography series by the same name. These photographs had originally been selected to be a part of the Lacoste Elysée Competition. However, after being shortlisted by the museum, Larissa was contacted by the museum staff, informing her that her film was deemed "too pro-Palestinian" by the people from Lacoste.[1] Subsequently, Lacoste retracted the series and the artist from nomination as they did not want to be associated with the political overtones of the work.[2] The museum had also requested that she release a statement saying "Regarding your project for the Lacoste Elysée Prize, please know that I am sorry about the decision which was taken by Lacoste, as we all defended your work... It is now important that we agree on a common message that Lacoste and the Musée de l'Elysée will communicate to the other photographers, the jury members and the press if necessary.... I suggest that we use the following expression: ‘Larissa Sansour decided to pursue other opportunities.’”.[1]

Film Festivals

References

  1. 1 2 3 Milmo, Cahal. "Lacoste accused of attempting to censor 'too pro-Palestinian' art". The Independent.
  2. Laylin, Tafline. "Nation Estate is a Massive High Rise for All Palestinians". Green Prophet.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 "Nation Estate". Bucharest International Experimental Film Festival.
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