Scales (2021)

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Direction: Shahad Ameen
Country: Saudi Arabia

This art-house Saudi Arabian Oscar-entry film is an unhurried feminist parable with a powerful message, dazzling visual appeal (in a stylized black-and-white) and interesting symbolism and surrealism. The film, written and directed by Shahad Ameen, takes the form of a dystopian fairy tale, telling the story of a 12-year old girl, Hayat (Basima Hajja), who lives in a barren rocky island and is seen by the entire village as a bad omen.

This has to do with an ancient tradition that compels every family in the village to sacrifice a daughter and offer her to the sea. Their fate is to become mermaids and later be hunted by men. However, Hayat’s father (Yagoub Alfarhan) spares her life in a last-minute impulse. 

His act is seen as cowardice but, on the other hand, will give Hayat a chance to prove she is as brave, determined and capable as any man. Everything gets stuck in a rut when her contemptuous mother gives birth to a boy. It’s a constant battle against fate, an indefatigable refusal to accept men’s empowering rules and earn, if not total freedom, at least equality. 

Hypnotic and allegorical, Scales flows exquisitely, compensating the scarce dialogue with facial expressions - frequently captured through intimate closeups - that speak volumes. I understand that its opaque route, sometimes recalling Michelangelo Antonioni, may drive away a few viewers, but the attentive ones will know what to extract from the rich imagery and metaphorical point of view.

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