Today’s Awesome Google Doodle: Bonne Nuit Les Petits

Who remembers this awesome cartoon we used to watch when we were kids?

Bonne nuit les petits Marchand de Sable Google Doodle

 

“Bonne Nuit Les Petits” was the last thing my parents let me watch before ordering me off to bed when I was little. Time has changed – bedtime is no longer pre-news 8 pm these days. For those who don’t remember, the series portrayed two siblings: Nicolas and Pimprenelle who were visited by le Marchand de sable (the merchant of sand) just before bedtime as he told them moral stories before sprinkling sand over them as they went to bed.

Well, today’s Google Doodle makes me miss the simpler days of being a worry-less child.

The Attack: An Upcoming Lebanese Movie From The Maker of “West Beirut”

The Attack Ziad Doueiri

Set for release in 2013 is a movie titled The Attack by Ziad Doueiri, the director who brought us “West Beirut,” arguably one of Lebanese cinema’s most critically acclaimed movies yet.

The Attack was already screened at the Toronto Film Festival where it was well received. The movie is based on the novel by Algerian writer Yasmina Khadra and this is an overview of the plot:

When a suicide bomber strikes at a Tel Aviv café, Dr. Amin Jaafari (Ali Suliman), a Palestinian citizen of Israel and a highly respected surgeon, treats the wounded victims of the blast at a nearby hospital — at least those who will let him, as some refuse to be attended to by a Palestinian. Jaafari is not unaccustomed to such affronts, but this dreadful day has a far ruder shock in store. Late that night, Jaafari is called back to the hospital to identify the body of the bomber: his wife.

In an instant, Jaafari’s comfortable life is shattered. Grief-stricken, wracked by guilt and tormented by his own incomprehension, the doctor embarks on a desperate journey to understand his wife’s motivations for her terrible act. Retracing his wife’s recent trip to the occupied West Bank, where she had claimed to be visiting relatives, Jaafari goes in search of the people who recruited her, a voyage fraught with danger and surprises. What begins as an investigation, however, gradually evolves into a painful and revealing self-reckoning, as Jaafari is forced to confront the sum of his own life’s choices and the shaky foundations of his overlapping identities: as a Palestinian, an Israeli citizen, a doctor, and a husband.

Adapted from the critically acclaimed novel by the pseudonymous Algerian writer Yasmina Khadra, the new film from director Ziad Doueiri (West Beirut) is both a psychological thriller and an incisive exploration of one of the most complex political-ideological issues of our time. Lucid, precise and fearless, The Attack foregoes sermonizing, simplification and manipulation to remind us of cinema’s ability to engage with a charged political reality, to undermine the stereotypes that help fuel it and reveal it in its full, tragic, human dimension.

The Attack is set for a May 1st, 2013 release in France. If the content is deemed acceptable by Lebanon’s censorship bureau, it should be released here soon after that as was the case with Where Do We Go Now. It has won the top jury prize at the Marrakech Film Festival as well as two prizes at the ARTE MARE film festival.

I personally think the plot sounds interesting and based on some reviews that I read, it seems the movie is not disappointing in content. I guess we can judge for ourselves in a few months.

This is Ziad Doueiri discussing the movie.

Let’s hope the fact that the movie is filmed in Israel doesn’t end up being overly problematic.

Paulo Coelho Loves Nadine Labaki’s Where Do We Go Now

I’m not sure if I like the king of cliche making his love for Nadine Labaki’s hit movie, Where Do We Go Now, known but Paulo Coelho took it to twitter just now to let everyone know that he is a fan of Nadine Labaki’s 2011 movie which was a resounding success among audiences, even non-Lebanese ones, – less so among critics.

Coelho even liked the soundtrack, which isn’t hard to imagine as the music is definitely well done.

Paulo Coelho + Where Do We Go Now + Nadine Labaki

Ironically, the situation that sparked Where Do We Go Now happened way too many times in 2012. Hopefully Nadine Labaki won’t bother writing another movie where she invites Lebanese people from different religions (and more generally political) factions to love each other. The now-cliche aspect of Where Do We Go Now notwithstanding, I’m glad for the praise the movie just got even if it doesn’t mean much. I guess this is the first time someone as known as Coelho makes his liking for Lebanese cinema known.

Hopefully some good Lebanese movies see the light of day this year. You can buy Where Do We Go Now on DVD and Blu-Ray if you want to watch it.

What Would Miss Lebanon Rina Chibany Do If The World Ended Tomorrow?

Miss Lebanon Rina Chibani Miss Universe 2012

Well, she’s not that ambitious. It seems our Miss Lebanon Rina Chibany enjoys the simple things in life. And they’re way too simple if you ask me. But hey, at least this is not as disastrous as the previous ones we got. Who could forget Rahaf Abdallah?

However, it seems her chances at Miss Universe are decent. She may not win but she is definitely turning heads. She’s been getting a lot of votes (you can vote here) and critics seem to love her. I really hope she accomplishes something at that pageant – the country needs something like this to keep it busy.

Myriam Klink’s “Klink Revolution” Has A Music Video

Do you remember that Myriam Klink who goes by queen Myriam Klink of Klinkistan these days has a new song which was released last week?

Well, that song now has a music video to go with it. Lara Kay is definitely jealous and rolling in her kitchen sink right now. Literally. For those who couldn’t go through the song, maybe this would be enough for you to pull through?

You can always mute and watch. It won’t make any difference.