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With all the upheavals taking place in today’s uncertain world, how has the image of the apocalypse transformed over time? Is it still imagined within a romantic religious framework, or has it shifted towards darker, more unknown territory? This film attempts to explore the decaying portrait of the end of the world by using real-life footage: VHS tapes of the burning oil fields in Kuwait in 1991, which were set ablaze during the retreat of invading forces after the First Gulf War. These hellish images are combined with audio monologues from Islamic television programs, creating a picture of sublimity within destruction. Kuwait 2013, HD, 10 minutes. Monira Al Qadiri is a Kuwaiti visual artist and filmmaker born in Dakar, Senegal in 1983 and educated in Japan.With all the upheavals taking place in today’s uncertain world, how has the image of the apocalypse transformed over time? Is it still imagined within a romantic religious framework, or has it shifted towards darker, more unknown territory? This film attempts to explore the decaying portrait of the end of the world by using real-life footage: VHS tapes of the burning oil fields in Kuwait in 1991, which were set ablaze during the retreat of invading forces after the First Gulf War. These hellish images are combined with audio monologues from Islamic television programs, creating a picture of sublimity within destruction.
Monira Al Qadiri is a Kuwaiti visual artist and filmmaker born in Dakar, Senegal in 1983 and educated in Japan.
Format: HD
Running time: 10 minutes