Zero Film Marocain Link May 2026

Zero Film Marocain Link May 2026

It wasn’t a newsreel or colonial propaganda. It was a fiction scene : a Moroccan fisherman in a djellaba, sitting on a Casablanca dock, mending a net. His young son runs up to him. No words. Just the wind, their hands, the light on the water. The boy hands his father a small fish. The father smiles, places a hand on the boy’s head.

At the end of the reel, a handwritten title card appeared in Arabic and French: “Bab El Bahr – Essai réalisé par Ahmed Chawki, 1944.” Youssef spent months searching for Ahmed Chawki. He asked old projectionists, newspaper archivists, café elders. Finally, he found a retired customs officer who remembered: “Ahmed? He worked at the port. He loved cinema. Borrowed a camera from the American consulate. They say he filmed a short thing. Then the French authorities came. Told him cinema was not for ‘indigènes.’ Took his camera. He never tried again. Died in ’52, I think.” zero film marocain

Casablanca, 1958. Protagonist: Youssef, a 60-year-old former projectionist at the now-shuttered Cinéma Vox . The Silence Before the Image For decades, Moroccans under the French Protectorate (1912–1956) had seen their country only through foreign lenses. French, Italian, and American crews came to shoot “exotic” scenes — snake charmers in Marrakech, veiled women in alleys — but never a single feature film written, directed, or produced entirely by Moroccans. Zero film marocain. It wasn’t a newsreel or colonial propaganda

And in that moment, zero became one . That fragment — Bab El Bahr (The Sea Gate) — is now preserved in the Cinémathèque de Tanger. Historians consider it the earliest surviving work of Moroccan fiction film. Youssef never became famous. He died in 1975, having seen only a handful of Moroccan films released in his final years — but he had planted a truth: No words

After the last frame flickered out, no one spoke for a long time. Then an old woman in the corner said, “That’s my father’s dock. I remember that wind.”

Inside was a short, silent 35mm film strip — about three minutes long. He took it home, cleaned it with a velvet cloth, and spooled it onto his old hand-crank viewer.

Youssef had spent 35 years threading projectors, breathing in the smell of nitrate and dust. He watched Casablanca (1942) dozens of times — an American film shot in Hollywood, not one frame of real Casablanca. He saw Egyptians singing, Frenchmen arguing politics, cowboys riding through Arizona. But never a Moroccan face telling a Moroccan story.

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