Mahamat-Saleh Haroun

Mahamat-Saleh Haroun

geb. 1961
Abéché, Tsjaad

Biografie

Mahamat-Saleh Haroun was born in 1960 in Chad. He studied film in Paris and journalism in Bordeaux. After writing for several years for many regional dailies, he wrote and directed his first short film Maral Tanié in 1994. In 2006, he won the Special Jury Award at the Venice Film Festival for his third feature, Daratt, A dry season. In the same year, the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York paid tribute to Haroun by hosting a retrospective of his films. In 2010, his fourth feature, A Screaming Man, won the Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival. In the same year, he garnered the prestigious Robert Bresson Award at the Venice Film Festival, and the Premio Humanidade at the 34th Mostra in Sao Paulo, Brazil. He was a member of the Jury for the main competition at the Festival de Cannes in 2011. Shot in Chad in 2012, Grigris is his fifth feature.

Les Films du Losange

Regisseur

Scenarioschrijver

Films
2021

Lingui, the Sacred Bonds

2017

Une saison en France

2013

Grigris

2006

Dry Season

2002

Abouna

Documentaire
2016

Hissène Habré

1999

Bye Bye Africa

Korte films
1997

B 400

Producent

Films
2006

Dry Season

Acteur

Documentaire
2018

Tous au Festival (Tv-film) - a.b.

1999

Bye Bye Africa

1998

Comme au cinéma (serie)

Host

Programma's
2010

Janela Indiscreta

Cameraman

Documentaire
1999

Bye Bye Africa