Storyline set in 2053 in the fictional Arab state of Alephia follows a group of undercover agents plotting to take down hereditary ruler.
Alephia 2053, an Arabic-language animated feature set in a bleak future, has struck a chord in a region all too familiar with autocratic rule and bold, bloody resistance.
Released on YouTube on March 21, 10 years after the Arab Spring uprisings, the Lebanese-made 60-minute thriller has already garnered more than eight million views.
It is “proof that the movie reflects people’s thoughts”, says Rabih Sweidan, the film’s Lebanese creator and executive producer.
“Everyone sees it from their perspective and they see themselves and their communities in it,” Sweidan added.
The storyline, set in 2053 in the fictional Arab state of Alephia, follows a group of undercover agents plotting to take down hereditary ruler Alaa Ibn Ismail and his oppressive regime, described as the most tyrannical in the world.
Through a meticulous operation led by operatives who have infiltrated top government ranks, the “resistance” succeeds in toppling the dictator in a coup and ending a century of despotic rule.
They are buoyed by crowds taking to the streets chanting the now-famous Arab Spring refrain – “the people demand the fall of the regime” – in the face of heavily armed security forces who respond with live fire.
The movie closes with a familiar scene: Fists thrown into the air as a euphoric crowd pulls down the statue of the fallen leader with ropes.
Sweidan says Alephia 2053, with its uncannily familiar-looking dictator figure, is “a fictional movie but it is based on reality, it is a description of social reality”.
It is not inspired by any single Arab country but depicts conditions familiar to many across the world, he says.
“The world has become a small village, where the situation is the same in more than one place,” Sweidan said. “Alephia could be the 23rd country in the Arab League”, which has 22 members.
Brighter future
Though the movie is highly reminiscent of the 2011 uprisings, Sweidan says it is an attempt to break away from what he calls an obsession with the past.
“There is always a tendency in the Arab world to imagine what might have happened in the past, but there is no theatrical or cinematic work that imagines what the Arab world will be like in the future,” says Sweidan. “The idea for the film came from a question: What will the Arab world look like in 20 or 30 years?”
According to Sweidan’s vision, the future holds more promise.
The film tries to express this through colour grading: the closing scenes incorporate a livelier gradient than the dim and dusty scheme that dominates the first chunk of the film, says Sweidan.
“Things can’t always remain dark,” he adds. “What this film wants to imagine is a future that’s not as bad as the past or the present.”
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