14/01/2026

‘Palestine 36’, The Historical Film by Annemarie Jacir on the Great Arab Revolt
DOSSIER

Fausto Giudice, 14/1/2026

It began its public journey last September at the Toronto Film Festival, then opened the Carthage Film Festival last December. Nominated for Palestine for the Best International Film Oscar in coming March, Palestine 36 is beginning its theatrical run these days in Tunisia, France, and other countries, following its Palestinian premiere in Gaza on December 22, and Egypt and Great Britain, where it was screened as early as late December.

Annemarie Jacir's film is a true event. It is the first film about the Great Palestinian Revolt, which saw a confrontation between the Palestinian people and the British occupiers, aided by armed Zionist settlers, for three long years, from 1936 to 1939. Its most impressive sequence was a general strike that lasted six months. 100,000 British soldiers, the largest military force deployed in that empire “on which the sun never set,” fought by all means an organized population resorting to a thousand forms of resistance.

As in all anti-colonial struggles, a dialectical combination of various forms and levels of struggle was witnessed. The general strike launched from Jaffa on April 21, 1936, lasted 174 days, until October 11. Approximate toll: 5,000 Palestinians killed and 2,000 detained, 200 British and 500 Jews killed.

The meaning and lessons of this historical moment for Palestine and the world today are strikingly evident.

To tell this page of Palestine's history, a mirror of the world today as it was yesterday, Annemarie Jacir had the required background: A Christian Palestinian born in Bethlehem in 1974, she now lives in Haifa after studying and working in the USA and France. She has built a “portfolio” of cinematic works that enabled her to make her “magnum opus” possible. The film was financed by about ten countries and produced by a dozen producers, from the BBC and Denmark to Qatar, including foundations from wealthy Palestinian families. Filming was an ordeal: it began in the West Bank before October 7, was interrupted after, continued in Jordan, then resumed in Palestine. The boundaries between historical fiction and contemporary reality were very fluid. For instance, in a scene filmed in Nablus, British soldiers use a young Palestinian villager as a human shield in front of their jeep. On the same day, Israeli soldiers were filmed in reality tying a wounded Palestinian to the hood of their jeep in Jenin.

The challenge for the director was: how to tell, almost a century later, in an effective, convincing, and humanly plausible way, a foundational historical period for a Palestinian, Arab, and global audience? Jacir made choices:

1- Only two of the three collective protagonists are shown in detail: the Palestinians and the British. The Jews – immigrants and Zionist settlers – are only evoked, seen through the eyes of the natives, for whom the kibbutzniks settling in their fortified farms appear as alien invaders.

2- While the British characters – High Commissioner, general, war criminal captain – are reconstructed versions of real historical figures with their real names, the Palestinian characters are fictional compositions based on real historical figures.

3- The contradictions within each camp are not avoided, be it the betrayals on the Palestinian side or the disagreements on repression on the British side.

4- As in all Annemarie Jacir films, women and children are full-fledged characters, as far from the patriarchal machismo of some Arab films as from the wokally correct rosewater Hollywood feminism.

5- Finally, the film is and remains a fictional reconstruction, avoiding didactic aspects and translating ideological and political aspects through images, postures, attitudes, retorts, glances.

Questions and answers

The two characters that struck me the most are:

1- that of the Palestinian journalist from Al Qods, Khulud Atef, played by Yasmine Al Massri, a magnificent actress born in Lebanon to a Palestinian father and Lebanese mother, whom we discovered in Nadine Labaki's Caramel (2007)

2- that of Captain Wingate, played by British actor of Basque father Robert Aramayo

Khulud is a fictional character. Wingate is a real historical figure. What is their relationship with historical reality?


Read more



Aucun commentaire: