When we say JCC, we say rooms that are full to crack! What would it be afterwards? The total desert.
“Once upon a time at dawn”, the famous short film by Mohamed Ali Nahdi broke the barrack yesterday afternoon in the Le Colisée cinema. Recording the veil of what Tunisian society persists in camouflaging and suffocating, the young director explodes taboos and shakes the social dogmas which only make our young people fucked even more.
The film was screened at closed counters!
So let’s talk about these counters. Shakes, pile up and a huge crowd argued the tickets, which, vanished-please-an hour before the projection!
More than a dozen people were there, an hour before, to see the film that came close to the Chronicle. Lost pain! For good reason, they were falsely informed by the counter.
Instead of simply telling them that it was complete, they are asked to come back at 4.30pm; When the time comes, we inform them that the film is indeed finished and that the tickets available to them are planned for the film after, that of 6 p.m.! Terribly disappointed, they go by regretting having come for a festival, whose poor organization is disgusting!
Misleading people who are thirsty for Tunisian cinema would only tarnish the image of the JCCs, that some officials try to make brilliant and attractive.