Wanderers of the Desert | El-haimoune - Les baliseurs du désert (1986)
Synopsis
A traveling writer and teller of fables, Nacer Khemir here applies his age-old skills to a narrative feature film, the first in his highly-regarded Desert Trilogy that includes The Dove's Lost Necklace and Bab'Aziz - The Prince Who Contemplated His Soul.
Khemir creates an exotic world with Wanderers of the Desert when a young teacher arrives to take over a village school isolated in the shimmering desert.
Reminiscent of the best Iranian films of the 1970s in its use of color and setting, it also has something of the wit, cruelty and ambiguity of the Arabian Nights.
Legendary figures materialize out of wells and the desert itself, groups of children hurry through a labyrinth of underground corridors, the teacher is whisked away to a mysterious rendezvous and never returns.
Nothing is really explained; Khemir merely shows how legend, tradition and fate hang heavily over this community and he does so with a richly expressive visual style aided by superb use of color.
Especially notable is the way the protagonists are always placed against sun-scorched landscapes in which nothing is quite what it seems, like the marvelous moment when everyone gathers around a ship that has mysteriously washed up in the desert sand.
"A meditation on the lost grandeur of Arab civilization"- Seattle Arab and Iranian Film Festival
Awards
Winner! Special Jury Prize -- Carthage Film Festival
Winner! International Critics Prize -- Valencia Film Festival
Read about this film
Title: Wanderers of the Desert | El-haimoune - Les baliseurs du désert (1986)
Directed by: Nacer Khemir
Date of birth: 1948, Korba, Tunisia
Writing credits:
Nacer Khemir
Music by: Fethi Zgonda
Country: France
Language: French
Color: Color
Runtime: 95 min.