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 »  Home  »  Arts & Culture  »  Israeli film Ajami nominated for Oscar
Israeli film Ajami nominated for Oscar
By Info Web | Published  02/14/2010 | Arts & Culture
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Israeli film Ajami nominated for Oscar


The Israeli film Ajami was selected as one of the five nominees for the Best Foreign Language Film Oscar. This is the third year in a row that Israel has received an Oscar nomination in this category, and Israel's ninth nomination overall. Ajami, a drama about crime in the city of Jaffa, adjacent to Tel Aviv, was directed by Scandar Copti, an Israeli-Arab Christian, and Yaron Shani, an Israeli Jew.

The Israeli film Ajami was selected as one of the five nominees for the Best Foreign Language Film Oscar on February 2, 2010. This is the third year in a row that Israel has received an Oscar nomination in this category, and Israel's ninth nomination overall. However, no Israeli film has ever won the Best Foreign Film award.

Ajami, a drama about crime in the city of Jaffa, adjacent to Tel Aviv, was directed by Scandar Copti, an Israeli-Arab Christian, and Yaron Shani, an Israeli Jew. Copti, Shani and the rest of the movie's cast and crew headed to a restaurant in Jaffa to celebrate the nomination after the announcement.

According to Jerusalem Post film critic Hannah Brown, the fact that Ajami received a nomination is a triumph for its young directors, both first-time filmmakers. They spent seven years making the film, which features a cast of almost all non-professionals, mainly from Jaffa. Its complex narrative involves the conflicts and alliances among Israeli Arabs and Jews, Arab Christians and Muslims, as well as West Bank Palestinians and Beduin.

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