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Welcome to Deadline’s International Disruptors, a feature where we shine a spotlight on key executives and companies outside of the U.S. shaking up the offshore marketplace. This week, we’re talking to Gianluca Chakra, founder and managing director of pan-Arab distribution outfit Front Row Filmed Entertainment. The company, which was founded from humble beginnings in 2003, is now one of the most prominent companies in the Middle East and recently launched its first production with Netflix, Perfect Strangers.

It’s been an auspicious start to the year for Gianluca Chakra’s pan-Arab outfit Front Row Filmed Entertainment. The company, which has long been at the forefront of distributing top-shelf independent cinema to the Middle East region, kicked off 2022 with its first production Perfect Strangers, the latest international remake of 2016 Italian hit Perfetti Sconosciuti. Netflix boarded the project last year after signing a first-look deal with Front Row, marking the streamer’s first Arabic original feature.

“I remember watching the original in Italy and I was amazed by how many people were fighting when they came out of the cinema,” recalls Dubai-based Chakra. “All of these couples came out of the film and were at each other’s throats, and I thought it was insane. I immediately thought someone should remake this.”

The premise of the comedy-drama follows seven long-time friends who play a game over dinner by putting their cell phones on the table and revealing every text message or phone call they receive in the evening. It’s since spawned 18 international versions, making it one of the most remade films of all time.

For Chakra, it was the ideal launching pad into the production fray and the film’s structure offered up a perfect opportunity to pool together some of the region’s best talent in one film. He reached out to Mario Jr. Haddad of Beirut-based Empire Entertainment as well as Cairo-based Film Clinic and began assembling “a team of like-minded people” to piece together this ambitious pan-Arab project.

Directed by Wissam Smayra, who co-writes with Gabriel Yammine, Chakra’s version of the film stars Capernaum writer-director Nadine Labaki and Egyptian star Mona Zaki and, in keeping with many of the other international versions, various secrets and scandals come to light throughout the story. There’s a gay character and a scene where Zaki removes her underwear (although there is no nudity at all in the film), parts of the film that would undoubtedly become talking points in some conservative Middle East countries. Recently, films like West Side Story and Eternals were banned in some cinemas in the region due to their inclusion of LGBTQ characters. Netflix, of course, doesn’t need to go through those regional censors as a streamer.

Soon after it premiered on Netflix on January 20, Perfect Strangers topped the platform’s most-viewed charts in many countries throughout the region including Morocco, Egypt and Saudi Arabia and more but with that it sparked a wave of controversy, particularly in Egypt, where it saw one member of parliament demand to ban Netflix entirely and Egyptian lawyer Ayman Mahfouz claiming the film was a “plot to disrupt Arab society.”
Encouragingly, the movie has received loud applause across the region with many people praising the storyline and calling for Arab cinema to be more relatable, particularly to the LGBTQ community and even the Egyptian Actors’ Syndicate released an official statement in support of Zaki.
While Chakra is keeping mum about the controversy, he says that one thing Front Row has always done and will continue to do is “push the envelope.”
“I think it’s essential to do that,” he says.

Encouragingly, the movie has received loud applause across the region with many people praising the storyline and calling for Arab cinema to be more relatable, particularly to the LGBTQ community and even the Egyptian Actors’ Syndicate released an official statement in support of Zaki.

While Chakra is keeping mum about the controversy, he says that one thing Front Row has always done and will continue to do is “push the envelope.”

“I think it’s essential to do that,” he says.

Indeed, Chakra has had a pattern of spotting opportunities in places others have overlooked. Raised in Rome, Chakra’s love for cinema was sparked by his father, the late film industry veteran Michel Chakra.

“I remember as a kid I would wait for him to come back from Cannes with all of these promos and trailers on VHS and I’d spend hours in front of the TV with him going, ‘why don’t you buy this one and why don’t you buy that one,’” recalls Chakra.

After a stint working with his father, Chakra moved to Beirut to finish college and there he ended up working for a rival company called Prime Pictures, where he handled acquisitions for the MENA region on titles such as My Big Fat Greek Wedding and Billy Elliot. He spent three years there and helped the company open its first office in Dubai.

But, getting restless, he decided to go back to Rome where he had a stint as a programming executive at the MedFilm Festival, the country’s only festival dedicated to the promotion of Mediterranean, Middle Eastern and European Cinema.

“I was the guy who spoke English so it was pretty easy to program films but I just couldn’t live off of the wages they were paying me,” he says. “With most of my friends moving back to Dubai at the time, I thought to myself, ‘there’s a gap in the Dubai market – let’s give it a shot.”

He moved back to Lebanon, “sold the car, sold the TV, sold everything and came to Dubai with a capital of $14,000, and it kind of all got started like that.”

Front Row Filmed Entertainment was established in 2003 under the aegis of his father, and in less than three years, it established itself as one of the leading independent film distributors in the Middle East, bringing titles like Lars Von Trier’s Dogville, Michael Moore’s Bowling For Columbine and Paul Greengrass’ Bloody Sunday to an audience that had mainly been served big, tentpole titles. DVD was booming and Chakra, who always kept home entertainment rights when competitors didn’t, aimed for success in this burgeoning home entertainment sector.

“I didn’t have much competition when it came to acquiring films that I personally liked,” he says. “I always thought that the gap was in the City Of Gods and the Bloody Sundays as there was nobody that distributed those films in the region.”

He adds, “All of the competition out here at the time had this mentality that ‘chicks with guns’ was the kind of stuff that worked. I had this conviction that the DVD audience was different and a bit more sophisticated.”

Front Row’s breakout success came with the release of Moore’s Fahrenheit 9/11, which was the first documentary to ever be released theatrically in the Middle East. Despite considerable initial resistance from local exhibitors, the title broke into the top 20 list of 2004. That same year, the company serviced Warner Bros’s titles in the Gulf Region for three years, releasing films such as the Harry Potter franchise, Superman Returns and Syriana.

Chakra tapped into innovative marketing strategies to attract local audiences to titles, something his competitors had yet to exploit. For instance, with Superman Returns, the company cinched a deal with United Arab Emirates newspaper Gulf News to do a promotional Daily Record edition to promote the newest Superman title.

“It was so much fun, and I loved it,” recalls Chakra. “There had been a lot of ignorance at the time of how to find your audience. People would literally turn up to the cinema and at look at the best poster and that’s how they would choose their films. I realized that this is not the way things had to work.”

In 2005, Front Row struck a long-term strategic alliance and partnership with Kuwait National Cinema Company, which controls 94% of the screens in Kuwait. “That really opened us up to the Kuwaiti market, which was growing at the time, and then slowly we started to get more theatrical releases. Obviously the backbone was still DVD at the time, but that’s how we built the Front Row name.”

Today, the company employs 21 people, (42 if you include its Reel Image Middle East digital and post-production lab that it founded in 2013 with Reel Image Media Technologies, KWNCC and Dubai’s Golden Cinemas) and it acquires 90 to 120 titles per year.

It operates throughout the entire MENA region, with a particularly strong presence in the UAE, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, the latter through its joint venture with Muvi Cinemas (more on that later) . It’s been a pioneer in digital distribution in the area, being one of the first distributors to do premium VOD releases. Additionally, the company has inked exclusive aggregation agreements with iTunes, GooglePlay and YouTube and was one of the first companies to work with Netflix in the region when it scored a significant, worldwide deal for Lebanese black comedy Very Big Shot in 2016.

“With Very Big Shot, we took it on for worldwide sales, which we had never done before and we knew that Netflix was up and coming internationally,” says Chakra. “I kept pushing them, telling them this was a good film for them to start with. I was embarrassingly persistent. But eventually we signed a deal, and it became the first Arab film to hit Netflix.”

Front Row is continuing to break down doors as it makes inroads into the burgeoning Saudi Arabian market. Last year, it launched distribution label Front Row Arabia in partnership with the country’s local exhibitor Muvi Cinemas. The aim is to bring indie and genre titles to the territory, a country which only lifted its 35-year-old religion-related ban on cinema in 2017.

The label kicked off with the release of action thriller The Marksman last January and has released around 40 titles since then.

“Saudi Arabia is a market that needs to grow,” says Chakra. “It’s a market that wants to be discovered so there are going to be a lot of opportunities. Unlike the UAE, where there is no real core audience as just 12% are locals and there’s a large portion of Western expats and Asians, Saudi, like Kuwait, has a base majority of locals. So that’s where you can build. Yes, you’re always going to have an audience for blockbusters but at the same time you could have an audience for arthouse cinema.”

He adds, “What’s beyond valuable, and what translates throughout all of the Middle East, is Arab cinema, local cinema. 60% of the population don’t speak English so to them, Arab cinema is a must.”

In response to this, Front Row will continue to ramp up its local production ambitions. A few years ago, Front Row and KNCC joined forces with London-based sales and financing outfit Rocket Science to launch Dubai-based film and TV company Yalla Yalla, aimed at making shows and features for the Arab-language market. Last year, it formed a partnership with Beirut-based outfit Operation Unicorn in another move to boost its output of local language content.

Through Yalla Yalla and OU, there’s a slew of projects in development including comedy series From The Bathroom, couples’ dramedy Heads Or Tails and a docu series that will be unveiled next year. They have also teamed on an Arabic remake of French hit Intouchables, which is eyeing a shoot date this year.

Will Front Row be one of the catalysts for a new wave of Arabic content that breaks down old patterns and conservative norms?

“I hope so, I honestly hope so,” says Chakra. “The Middle East is where shit is really going to hit the fan. Quite a bit. And I really think it’s needed because, in my opinion, there’s nothing that really stands out or is moving the needle yet. We need to help move the needle.”

Goodfellas and Utopia have announced a slew of sales for Gia Coppola’s The Last Showgirl following its launch at the Cannes market.

The movie, starring Pamela Anderson as a veteran Las Vegas showgirl forced to reinvent her life, was a hot title in the lead up to the market this year.

In first deals, it has sold to MENA (Front Row Filmed Entertainment / Teleview International), Benelux (September Film Distribution), Switzerland (Filmcoopi Zurich), Germany (Constantin Film), Spain (Vertigo Films), UK (Picturehouse), Italy (Be Water Film), Poland (Gutek Film), CIS (Capella Film), Australia (Madman Entertainment) and airlines (Skeye Inflight Entertainment).

Further major deals are currently under negotiation, with the expectation that all territories will be sold by the end of the market.

Anderson plays a seasoned showgirl who is left high and dry when her show abruptly closes after a 30-year run. As a dancer in her fifties, she struggles with what to do next. As a mother, she strives to repair a strained relationship with her daughter, who often took a backseat to her showgirl family.

Currently in post-production, the Las Vegas-set film also features Jamie Lee Curtis, Dave Bautista, Brenda Song, Kiernan Shipka, Billie Lourd and Jason Schwartzman in the cast.

Kate Gersten (The Good Place) wrote the original story and screenplay. Robert Schwartzman (The Good Half) and Natalie Farrey (Her) produced. Cinematography is by Autumn Durald Arkapaw (Black Panther: Wakanda Forever), and Andrew Wyatt (Barbie) wrote the original music.

The movie’s Cannes Market roll-out marked the first joint sales operation between Paris-based sales and production company Goodfellas and New York and L.A.-based distributor and sales company Utopia, building on a relationship formed over the latter’s acquisition and distribution of Goodfellas titles such as Holy Spider and Vortex.

“This has far exceeded our projections, we’re extremely proud of how well buyers responded to the script and promo reel, and very happy with this first co-selling experience,” commented Goodfellas Head of Sales Eva Diederix and Utopia VP of Sales Marie Zeniter.

Vin Diesel is set to enter production on Riddick: Furya, the anticipated fourth installment of the Riddick franchise, on August 26.

Shooting in Germany, Spain and the U.K., this follow-up to the sci-fi films Pitch Black (2000), The Chronicles of Riddick (2004) and Riddick (2013) reunites Diesel with writer-director David Twohy. Diesel reprises his role as the anti-hero Richard B. Riddick, a dangerous escaped convict wanted by every bounty hunter in the galaxy.

In Riddick: Furya, Riddick finally returns to his home world, a place he barely remembers and one he fears might be left in ruins. But there he finds other Furyans fighting for their existence against a new monster. And some of these Furyans are more like Riddick than he could have ever imagined.

Diesel will produce for One Race Films, alongside Samantha Vincent. Thorsten Schumacher for Rocket Science and Lars Sylvest for Thank You Studios will also produce alongside Joe Neurauter. Rocket Science repped international rights and has completed worldwide cornerstone pre-sales to the UK (yet to be announced), France (Metropolitan), Germany (Leonine), Spain and Latin America (Sun), Benelux (The Searchers), Poland (Kinoswiat), Canada (Elevation), Scandinavia (Scanbox), Portugal (Lusomundo), Switzerland (Ascot Elite), South Africa (Empire), Greece (Femeway), the Middle East (Front Row), CIS and Baltic States, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Czech/Slovak, Republic Former Yugoslavia (ProRom), and Thailand (Sahamongkhol). CAA Media Finance is representing the film’s North American rights.

Most recently producing and starring in Fast X, which grossed over $704M worldwide, Diesel has also in recent years been heard voicing Groot in the Guardians of the Galaxy franchise and other Marvel projects.

Previously writing and directing all three Riddick films, Twohy is also known for his writing of the Harrison Ford starrer The Fugitive. Also the writer-director of the alien horror pic The Arrival and supernatural thriller Below, he most recently penned the financial thriller Big Dogs, to be directed by Ridley Scott.

At Cannes, Rocket Science’s slate also includes Ali Abbasi’s Competition entry The Apprentice starring Sebastian Stan, Jeremy Strong and Maria Bakalova; Michael Gracey’s Better Man; Alex Winter’s Adulthood starring Josh Gad, Kaya Scodelario and Anthony Carrigan; Peter Cataneo’s The Penguin Lessons starring Steve Coogan; and Louis Leterrier’s 11817.

Diesel is represented by CAA and Linden Entertainment; Twohy by Atlas Artists.

Welcome to Deadline’s International Disruptors, a feature where we shine a spotlight on key executives and companies outside of the U.S. shaking up the offshore marketplace. This week, we’re talking to Gianluca Chakra, founder and managing director of pan-Arab distribution outfit Front Row Filmed Entertainment. The company, which was founded from humble beginnings in 2003, is now one of the most prominent companies in the Middle East and recently launched its first production with Netflix, Perfect Strangers.

It’s been an auspicious start to the year for Gianluca Chakra’s pan-Arab outfit Front Row Filmed Entertainment. The company, which has long been at the forefront of distributing top-shelf independent cinema to the Middle East region, kicked off 2022 with its first production Perfect Strangers, the latest international remake of 2016 Italian hit Perfetti Sconosciuti. Netflix boarded the project last year after signing a first-look deal with Front Row, marking the streamer’s first Arabic original feature.

“I remember watching the original in Italy and I was amazed by how many people were fighting when they came out of the cinema,” recalls Dubai-based Chakra. “All of these couples came out of the film and were at each other’s throats, and I thought it was insane. I immediately thought someone should remake this.”

The premise of the comedy-drama follows seven long-time friends who play a game over dinner by putting their cell phones on the table and revealing every text message or phone call they receive in the evening. It’s since spawned 18 international versions, making it one of the most remade films of all time.

For Chakra, it was the ideal launching pad into the production fray and the film’s structure offered up a perfect opportunity to pool together some of the region’s best talent in one film. He reached out to Mario Jr. Haddad of Beirut-based Empire Entertainment as well as Cairo-based Film Clinic and began assembling “a team of like-minded people” to piece together this ambitious pan-Arab project.

Directed by Wissam Smayra, who co-writes with Gabriel Yammine, Chakra’s version of the film stars Capernaum writer-director Nadine Labaki and Egyptian star Mona Zaki and, in keeping with many of the other international versions, various secrets and scandals come to light throughout the story. There’s a gay character and a scene where Zaki removes her underwear (although there is no nudity at all in the film), parts of the film that would undoubtedly become talking points in some conservative Middle East countries. Recently, films like West Side Story and Eternals were banned in some cinemas in the region due to their inclusion of LGBTQ characters. Netflix, of course, doesn’t need to go through those regional censors as a streamer.

Soon after it premiered on Netflix on January 20, Perfect Strangers topped the platform’s most-viewed charts in many countries throughout the region including Morocco, Egypt and Saudi Arabia and more but with that it sparked a wave of controversy, particularly in Egypt, where it saw one member of parliament demand to ban Netflix entirely and Egyptian lawyer Ayman Mahfouz claiming the film was a “plot to disrupt Arab society.”
Encouragingly, the movie has received loud applause across the region with many people praising the storyline and calling for Arab cinema to be more relatable, particularly to the LGBTQ community and even the Egyptian Actors’ Syndicate released an official statement in support of Zaki.
While Chakra is keeping mum about the controversy, he says that one thing Front Row has always done and will continue to do is “push the envelope.”
“I think it’s essential to do that,” he says.

Encouragingly, the movie has received loud applause across the region with many people praising the storyline and calling for Arab cinema to be more relatable, particularly to the LGBTQ community and even the Egyptian Actors’ Syndicate released an official statement in support of Zaki.

While Chakra is keeping mum about the controversy, he says that one thing Front Row has always done and will continue to do is “push the envelope.”

“I think it’s essential to do that,” he says.

Indeed, Chakra has had a pattern of spotting opportunities in places others have overlooked. Raised in Rome, Chakra’s love for cinema was sparked by his father, the late film industry veteran Michel Chakra.

“I remember as a kid I would wait for him to come back from Cannes with all of these promos and trailers on VHS and I’d spend hours in front of the TV with him going, ‘why don’t you buy this one and why don’t you buy that one,’” recalls Chakra.

After a stint working with his father, Chakra moved to Beirut to finish college and there he ended up working for a rival company called Prime Pictures, where he handled acquisitions for the MENA region on titles such as My Big Fat Greek Wedding and Billy Elliot. He spent three years there and helped the company open its first office in Dubai.

But, getting restless, he decided to go back to Rome where he had a stint as a programming executive at the MedFilm Festival, the country’s only festival dedicated to the promotion of Mediterranean, Middle Eastern and European Cinema.

“I was the guy who spoke English so it was pretty easy to program films but I just couldn’t live off of the wages they were paying me,” he says. “With most of my friends moving back to Dubai at the time, I thought to myself, ‘there’s a gap in the Dubai market – let’s give it a shot.”

He moved back to Lebanon, “sold the car, sold the TV, sold everything and came to Dubai with a capital of $14,000, and it kind of all got started like that.”

Front Row Filmed Entertainment was established in 2003 under the aegis of his father, and in less than three years, it established itself as one of the leading independent film distributors in the Middle East, bringing titles like Lars Von Trier’s Dogville, Michael Moore’s Bowling For Columbine and Paul Greengrass’ Bloody Sunday to an audience that had mainly been served big, tentpole titles. DVD was booming and Chakra, who always kept home entertainment rights when competitors didn’t, aimed for success in this burgeoning home entertainment sector.

“I didn’t have much competition when it came to acquiring films that I personally liked,” he says. “I always thought that the gap was in the City Of Gods and the Bloody Sundays as there was nobody that distributed those films in the region.”

He adds, “All of the competition out here at the time had this mentality that ‘chicks with guns’ was the kind of stuff that worked. I had this conviction that the DVD audience was different and a bit more sophisticated.”

Front Row’s breakout success came with the release of Moore’s Fahrenheit 9/11, which was the first documentary to ever be released theatrically in the Middle East. Despite considerable initial resistance from local exhibitors, the title broke into the top 20 list of 2004. That same year, the company serviced Warner Bros’s titles in the Gulf Region for three years, releasing films such as the Harry Potter franchise, Superman Returns and Syriana.

Chakra tapped into innovative marketing strategies to attract local audiences to titles, something his competitors had yet to exploit. For instance, with Superman Returns, the company cinched a deal with United Arab Emirates newspaper Gulf News to do a promotional Daily Record edition to promote the newest Superman title.

“It was so much fun, and I loved it,” recalls Chakra. “There had been a lot of ignorance at the time of how to find your audience. People would literally turn up to the cinema and at look at the best poster and that’s how they would choose their films. I realized that this is not the way things had to work.”

In 2005, Front Row struck a long-term strategic alliance and partnership with Kuwait National Cinema Company, which controls 94% of the screens in Kuwait. “That really opened us up to the Kuwaiti market, which was growing at the time, and then slowly we started to get more theatrical releases. Obviously the backbone was still DVD at the time, but that’s how we built the Front Row name.”

Today, the company employs 21 people, (42 if you include its Reel Image Middle East digital and post-production lab that it founded in 2013 with Reel Image Media Technologies, KWNCC and Dubai’s Golden Cinemas) and it acquires 90 to 120 titles per year.

It operates throughout the entire MENA region, with a particularly strong presence in the UAE, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, the latter through its joint venture with Muvi Cinemas (more on that later) . It’s been a pioneer in digital distribution in the area, being one of the first distributors to do premium VOD releases. Additionally, the company has inked exclusive aggregation agreements with iTunes, GooglePlay and YouTube and was one of the first companies to work with Netflix in the region when it scored a significant, worldwide deal for Lebanese black comedy Very Big Shot in 2016.

“With Very Big Shot, we took it on for worldwide sales, which we had never done before and we knew that Netflix was up and coming internationally,” says Chakra. “I kept pushing them, telling them this was a good film for them to start with. I was embarrassingly persistent. But eventually we signed a deal, and it became the first Arab film to hit Netflix.”

Front Row is continuing to break down doors as it makes inroads into the burgeoning Saudi Arabian market. Last year, it launched distribution label Front Row Arabia in partnership with the country’s local exhibitor Muvi Cinemas. The aim is to bring indie and genre titles to the territory, a country which only lifted its 35-year-old religion-related ban on cinema in 2017.

The label kicked off with the release of action thriller The Marksman last January and has released around 40 titles since then.

“Saudi Arabia is a market that needs to grow,” says Chakra. “It’s a market that wants to be discovered so there are going to be a lot of opportunities. Unlike the UAE, where there is no real core audience as just 12% are locals and there’s a large portion of Western expats and Asians, Saudi, like Kuwait, has a base majority of locals. So that’s where you can build. Yes, you’re always going to have an audience for blockbusters but at the same time you could have an audience for arthouse cinema.”

He adds, “What’s beyond valuable, and what translates throughout all of the Middle East, is Arab cinema, local cinema. 60% of the population don’t speak English so to them, Arab cinema is a must.”

In response to this, Front Row will continue to ramp up its local production ambitions. A few years ago, Front Row and KNCC joined forces with London-based sales and financing outfit Rocket Science to launch Dubai-based film and TV company Yalla Yalla, aimed at making shows and features for the Arab-language market. Last year, it formed a partnership with Beirut-based outfit Operation Unicorn in another move to boost its output of local language content.

Through Yalla Yalla and OU, there’s a slew of projects in development including comedy series From The Bathroom, couples’ dramedy Heads Or Tails and a docu series that will be unveiled next year. They have also teamed on an Arabic remake of French hit Intouchables, which is eyeing a shoot date this year.

Will Front Row be one of the catalysts for a new wave of Arabic content that breaks down old patterns and conservative norms?

“I hope so, I honestly hope so,” says Chakra. “The Middle East is where shit is really going to hit the fan. Quite a bit. And I really think it’s needed because, in my opinion, there’s nothing that really stands out or is moving the needle yet. We need to help move the needle.”

If they’re not being banned in the Middle East’s biggest market (where there are rumors even ‘Barbie’ potentially isn’t safe from censors), studio tentpoles are being muscled out of the box office, sparking a trend that looks set to continue as local moviegoers sour on “Americanized” releases.

There was a shock at the top of the Saudi Arabian box office the first weekend of 2023.

Avatar: The Way of Water, in its third week of release and still a dominant force across the planet on its way to an overall haul in excess of $2.3 billion, was knocked off its perch by an unexpected assailant (and one wearing a multicolored luchador mask).

The new titleholder: Sattar, a Saudi Arabian family comedy about a depressed man who follows his dreams of becoming a freestyle wrestling champion. The film — which had bowed at the Red Sea Film Festival just a month earlier (and where, ironically, the subject of Saudi films not performing had been a talking point) — smashed box office records, earning $2.2 million over its first 12 days, instantly making it the highest-grossing Saudi movie of all time. Granted, the local film industry literally didn’t exist just a few years ago and cinemas only opened in early 2018, but still — history was made.

From Kuwaiti director Abdullah Al Arak and led by popular Saudi actor and stand-up comedian Ibrahim Al Hajjaj, Sattar packed out cinemas, outpacing James Cameron’s Avatar sequel by more than 40 percent in terms of admissions and — fuelled by word of mouth — slipped just 11 percent in its second week.

Seven months on and Sattar is currently sitting pretty at the top of Saudi’s overall 2023 box office with an impressive haul of $10.7 million.

Sattar also potentially represents a worry for Hollywood studio execs who perhaps assumed they’d be claiming the lion’s share of what — in the space of just a few years — has become the biggest box office in the Middle East by some margin (total revenue of $242 million in 2022), the fastest-rising box office on the planet (it leaped to 15th in 2021 and held the position last year despite the post-pandemic recovery of others), and a box office that has been touted as potentially being worth some $1 billion by 2030.

Even before Sattar’s release just before the new year, lower-budget regional productions had increasingly been muscling out major studio tentpoles — many (many) times more expensive and backed by global marketing firepower — in a manner very few would have expected back in April 2018, when Black Panther became the first commercial film to be given a public screening in Saudi Arabia in 35 years. Blockbusters that have earned fortunes elsewhere simply haven’t landed at all in the country — not just edged out but entirely dominated by Arabic fare.

Sure, Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny may have underperformed internationally, but in Saudi Arabia the film couldn’t even break the top three, lagging behind a trio of Egyptian comedies: Tag, House of Ruby (in its second week, having knocked out The Flash in its first) and The Boogeyman (not to be confused with 20th Century Studios’ recent Stephen King adaptation of the same name). The following weekend, the Indy finale slipped to seventh and to 13th by week three for a truly disappointing overall box office of around $1 million. But even many films that have exceeded expectations in most markets hit a sour note among Saudi cinemagoers: In 12 weeks, Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 (global haul in excess of $845 million) hasn’t managed to scrape $2 million together.

“Fifty percent of the population in Saudi does not speak English,” explains Gianluca Chakra, head of regional distributor Front Row, which, via its Front Row Arabia joint venture with exhibition giant Muvi, was behind the releases of Sattar, House of Ruby and The Boogeyman. “They just relate to local stuff.”

Sattar was the perfect example — a very localized story, starring well-known local figures, featuring Saudi folk music and set in the world of wrestling, which is phenomenally popular in the country (there’s good reason WWE has been taking shows there for half a decade and recently signed a deal worth tens of millions a year).

Sattar was also made by people who knew exactly what Saudis want to watch, coming from Al Shimaisi Films, the new production arm of local content kings Telfaz11, who became hugely popular for their groundbreaking comedic YouTube videos dating back to 2010 (the film was the brainchild of Telfaz11’s creative director Ibraheem El Khairallah, who also starred in it), and Muvi Studios, the new production arm of cinema chain Muvi, led by industry pioneer Faisal Baltyuour. Baltyuour, a prolific producer who previously led the Saudi Film Commission and was only tapped to launch Muvi Studios in mid 2022, described the results as a “groundbreaking start.”

As Chakra claims, Sattar was the first locally made film that “didn’t try to Americanize itself,” noting that it was so Saudi — “uber local,” down to the jokes, characters and expressions — that even other Arabs probably wouldn’t understand much of the humor.

“And people just resonated with it and kept going and watching it,” he says. “They saw themselves onscreen versus the other Saudi titles that have tried to perfect their stories by Americanizing the story and the way the films are shot, and people just say, this isn’t a Saudi film.”

There’s been a similar trend in neighboring Kuwait, a much smaller market with a population of 4.5 million compared to Saudi’s 37 million, but where the vast majority are Kuwaiti-born Arabic speakers (around the corner in the Gulf, the United Arab Emirates’ population of 10 million presents another sizable box office — and was the largest regional market pre-Saudi’s opening up — but there foreign-speaking expats vastly outnumber local Emiratis). Kuwait now represents the second-biggest market for Arabic features after Saudi.

Hisham Alghanim, vice chairman of the Kuwait National Cinema Co, the country’s biggest exhibitor, says that his company had dedicated a significant number of screens to Dial of Destiny in its first week — “We don’t joke with Indiana Jones!” — but such were the results they quickly had to reshuffle the schedule to prioritize the dominating Egyptian films. While he admits he’d already begun to shift focus away from Hollywood titles toward Arabic features in his cinemas, following Indy’s poor showing, Alghanim says he now won’t “take for granted” the major studio tentpoles, especially if there are “good quality” local features coming out the same time.

Like Sattar in Saudi, Kuwait had its own huge homegrown hit in 2021 with zany family comedy Ash Man, about a Kuwaiti superhero whose powers come from a popular local soup made of red beans, lentils and chickpeas. Alghanim says the producer was recently in touch about his follow-up film.

The success of Egyptian movies, particularly family comedies, isn’t a major surprise — the output of the Middle East’s most-established film industry has long been a regional box office regular and it has often relied on revenues coming from the Gulf. But the emergence of Saudi Arabia — which, thanks to its population and high ticket pricing, presents a massive financial boom should a film break through — has made the region more important than ever before to Egyptian producers, especially given Egypt’s economic woes at home (the local currency has plummeted in value).

The situation has, as Chakra notes, sparked more productions with higher budgets aimed at capturing the market (budgets now generally sit in the $1 million-$3.5 million range, still a tiny fraction of the films they’re competing against). This, plus the emergence of better-quality non-Egyptian Arabic films, and Saudi Arabia’s growing appetite for local-language fare, has helped spark the box office shift.

But there’s another important factor to take into account — the growing number of major Hollywood titles getting banned in Saudi Arabia (and also Kuwait, which is considered stricter).

The last couple of years have seen the likes of Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse, Everything Everywhere All at Once, Thor: Love and Thunder, Lightyear, Doctor Who in the Multiverse of Madness, Eternals and West Side Story among those blocked from cinemas. Although it’s rarely confirmed, all of these films are understood to have been prevented from getting a release due to LGBTQ scenes or references, often with the censors suggesting cuts that were then refused by the studios.

There are now concerns over whether Warner Bros.’ all-conquering cultural phenomenon Barbie — which looks set to be the biggest film of the year globally — will get a pass, having already shifted to the later release date of August. 31.

But while such revenue losses may be felt in Hollywood, they don’t appear to have dampened Saudi Arabia’s box office growth. The overall total of $242.5 million in 2022 was up on 2021’s $233.5 million, while the $123.2 million earned in the first half of 2023 suggests this year should climb further. Any holes from the loss of blocked Hollywood fare are being very easily filled by the earnings of local productions.

In 2022, four Arabic films made the year’s top 10. Beneath Sattar in the current top 10 for 2023 are five other Arabic titles, all Egyptian: Sugar Daddy, Baad Al Shar, House of Ruby, Etneen Lel Ajar and Nabil El Jamik. Chakra notes that, due to the much longer theatrical shelf life of Arabic features compared to their Western counterparts, which often make a splash and then quickly fizzle out, House of Ruby — which entered the top 10 in only its fourth week and is still in general release — will likely climb higher, while The Boogeyman, also still going strong four weeks on, should enter the top 10. Meanwhile, there’s no space for the likes of Guardians of the Galaxy 3, The Little Mermaid or indeed, Avatar: The Way of Water.

But it’s not all doom and gloom for Hollywood. Universal’s The Super Mario Bros. Movie did prove a major hit, earning $6.1 million (currently third), while the region’s penchant for action has given top 10 spots to Fast X, Plane and John Wick 4 (fifth, sixth and seventh, respectively, at the time of writing).

Last month, Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One opened at the top of the box office and should have far sturdier legs than most other Hollywood blockbusters. “Most don’t last at all … unless it’s Tom Cruise,” suggests one producer (for all the success of Arabic films in 2022, the year’s best performer by some margin was Top Gun Maverick with $22 million, making Saudi the fourth-largest territory for Paramount’s smash hit across the Europe, the Middle East and Africa after the U.K., France and Germany).

Like Cruise, Christopher Nolan rarely misses in the Gulf (even an Interstellar re-release last year did solid figures). In the absence of Barbie, his latest blockbuster Oppenheimer had an outstanding opening last week, earning roughly $4.1 million, and will likely be among the year’s biggest. But even that doesn’t appear to have the staying power to match local entries. The Hollywood Reporter understands that the Egyptian comedy Mr. Ex — which released on the same date (and is rated 18 compared to Oppenheimer‘s 15) — has been outpacing the film since and will likely claim the top box office spot this week.

Trends suggest that, of this year’s upcoming Hollywood titles, video game adaptation Gran Turismo: The Movie, could do decent numbers, as might Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem (although its release has just been postponed, sparking fears that, like Barbie, it could be in jeopardy).

But with the release of Mattel’s plastic powerhouse now in doubt, and no new Cruise or Super Mario titles on the immediate horizon, the near future could well be dominated by Arabic productions. Chakra says there are several more Egyptian films set to come out later this year (although he acknowledges it’s often a somewhat last-minute, “OK, we’re done with the sound; when are we releasing?” approach to scheduling), while a number of Saudi features are lining up for release in coming months.

And while Sattar may be the only Saudi film to have broken out on home soil so far, following its phenomenal success producers have no doubt been looking to copy its special recipe. For anyone taking note, the key ingredients seem to be: less Hollywood, more Saudi.

The film is based on the true story of a man’s mission to rescue children from the darkest corners of the world.

MENA-based distributor and producer Front Row Filmed Entertainment has announced that Jim Caviezel’s new controversial child trafficking thriller movie Sound Of Freedom will release across major MENA cinemas on August 17, 2023.

Sound of Freedom, an independent American action-thriller, has been directed by Alejandro Monteverde, who co-wrote the screenplay alongside Rod Barr. The narrative follows the fearless Tim Ballard, portrayed by Jim Caviezel, who is also the film’s central figure. As the founder of Operation Underground Railroad, Ballard assembles a courageous team of operatives to embark on a perilous mission aimed at rescuing innocent children from the clutches of international sex trafficking networks. Sharing the screen with Caviezel is Mira Sorvino, who delivers a performance as Katherine Ballard, Tim’s steadfast wife and unwavering partner in his quest to save young lives.

Jim Caviezel stepped into the role of Tim Ballard, a former Homeland Security agent whose dedication led to the establishment of Operation Underground Railroad. The organisation’s mission is to combat the harrowing menace of child trafficking that spans the globe. Sound Of Freedom claims to be inspired by actual events from Ballard’s endeavours to liberate children from the clutches of sex traffickers, with a particular focus on his efforts in Colombia.

Having premiered on July 4, 2023, by Angel Studios, the film has made a significant impact at the box office, amassing an impressive $155m in earnings against its $14.5m budget.