Bab’Aziz: The Prince Who Contemplated His Soul is the story of a blind dervish named Bab’Aziz and his spirited granddaughter, Ishtar. Together they wander the desert in search of a great reunion of dervishes that takes place just once every thirty years.. With faith as their only guide, the two journey for days through the expansive, barren landscape. To keep Ishtar entertained, Bab’Aziz relays the ancient tale of a prince who relinquished his realm in order to remain next to a small pool in the desert, staring into its depths while contemplating his soul. As the tale of the prince unfolds, the two encounter other travelers with stories of their own–including Osman, who longs for the beautiful woman he met at the bottom of a well, and Zaid, who searches for the ravishing young woman who fled from him after being seduced by his songs. A fairytale-like story of longing and belonging, filmed in the enchanting and ever-shifting sandscapes of Tunisia and Iran. —IMDb
Nacer Khemir (Arabic: ناصر خمير), born in 1948 in Korba, Tunisia, is a Tunisian writer, artist, storyteller, and filmmaker.
From an early age, Khemir was fascinated by classical Arabic culture and by storytelling. He has cited the One Thousand and One Nights as a particular influence, saying, “I am a child of these stories.” However, in spite of this interest and a similar, lasting passion for film, Khemir initially planned a career as a painter and sculptor – a path he has, throughout his life, continued to pursue; his art has been exhibited at, among other institutions, the Centre Pompidou and the Museum of Modern Art in Paris.
In 1966, at the age of eighteen, he was awarded a UNESCO fellowship to study film in Paris. In 1975, he completed his first film, L’Histoire du pays du Bon Dieu (The History of God’s Country), shot in his hometown of Korba and featuring the desert setting and spiritual overtones that would figure prominently in his later work.
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It’s a rare experience for me to watch a foreign film that truly feels foreign. Film, after all, is a western invention, and even in non-Western countries, film was introduced at a time when western culture was at an all-consuming influence. But watching a film from the Middle East is often like looking through a glass darkly into another world that is strangely familiar, yet not. Bab’Aziz was one of these films. The best I have to compare this to are the visual phantasmagorias of Armenian director Sergei Parajanov. The world evoked here is one that is so fantastic. Colors and images just swirl around on screen. At times I felt like I could smell the land I was watching. I’m still not sure what the film was about, exactly, but it was such a hypnotic experience, and I found myself totally surrendered to its ebb and flow. At the same time, the ideas in this film are universal. Life, death, love, spirituality, music, and family. Bab’Aziz is one of the most rewarding and unique films I have seen in quite a while.
Uplifting without being melodramatic, this film does a brilliant job of using both space and stories. A beautiful soundtrack completes the experience.