Nick Vivarelli International Jessica Kiang Australia France New Zealand Sweden Italy Austria Germany Netherlands Belgium Switzerland Luxembourg Taiwan Sudan Liechtenstein South Sudan film social consequences country awards gossips Southern Nick Vivarelli International Jessica Kiang Australia France New Zealand Sweden Italy Austria Germany Netherlands Belgium Switzerland Luxembourg Taiwan Sudan Liechtenstein South Sudan

‘Goodbye Julia,’ First Film From Sudan at Cannes, Scores Substantial Sales After Winning an Un Certain Regard Prize (EXCLUSIVE)

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variety.com

Nick Vivarelli International Correspondent Sudanese director Mohamed Kordofani’s feature debut “Goodbye Julia,” a timely morality tale that takes place just before the 2011 secession of South Sudan and won the Un Certain Regard section’s Prix de Liberté (Freedom Prize) at Cannes, has scored a raft of sales following its launch.

The first Sudanese film ever to screen in Cannes official selection, “Goodbye Julia” is the story of two women — one from the North, the other from the South — who are brought together by fate in a complex relationship that attempts to reconcile differences between northern and southern Sudanese communities in the currently war-ravaged country.

After being picked up by ARP Sélection for France just ahead of its Cannes world premiere in May, the well-received drama has now been sold by pan-Arab distributor MAD Solutions – which moved into international distribution with this title – to the following territories: Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherlands (September Film); Italy (Satine Film); Sweden (Folkets Bio); Germany, Austria, Switzerland, and Liechtenstein (Trigon Film); Taiwan (Swallow Wings); and Australia and New Zealand (Potential Films).

In her Variety review of “Goodbye Julia” critic Jessica Kiang praised the film for being much more than “a primer for the class, ethnic and religious unrest that besets the troubled state” of Sudan, noting that “what actually transpires is far more engaging, in the vein of Asghar Farhadi, wherein a tight, high-concept moral core unravels into strands of widening, deepening social consequence.  “Goodbye Julia” is produced by Amjad Abu Alala, director of “You Will Die at Twenty,” which won Venice Film Festival’s Lion of the Future award for best first

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