Moumen Smihi, A Muslim Childhood / El Ayel: Le gosse de Tanger
Morocco 2005, 35mm, 83 min
This film, the first in what has become a semi-autobiographical trilogy for Smihi, follows the everyday experiences of Mohamed-Larbi Salmi against the changing Moroccan society. In 1950s Tangier, Larbi Salmi is a young, timid, pre-teen, boy, trying to make sense of the gentle religious upbringing of his father, the secular education offered him in French school, and his budding desires for the forbidden pleasures of the cinema and the women he meets through it. All the while the film offers a tapestry of fifties Tangier, an international zone marked by the influence of Arab, Berber, European and American histories. 'This film is dedicated,' Smihi has stated, 'to all those in the Arab world who cry out, "long live our freedom, all of our freedoms."'
Film programme notes by Peter Limbrick