Elia Suleiman
Known for: Directing
Born: July 27, 1960 in Nazareth, Israel
Elia Suleiman (Arabic: إيليا سليمان, IPA: [ˈʔiːlja sʊleːˈmaːn]; born 28 July 1960; Nazareth) is a Palestinian film director and actor. He is best known for the 2002 film Divine Intervention (Arabic: يد إلهية), a modern tragicomedy on living under occupation in Palestine which won the Jury Prize at the 2002 Cannes Film Festival. Suleiman's cinematic style is often compared to that of Jacques Tati and Buster Keaton, for its poetic interplay between "burlesque and sobriety". He is married to Lebanese singer and actress Yasmine Hamdan.
Known for
Showing 19 of 19 titles
Divine Intervention
E.S.
The Time That Remains
E.S.
7 Days in Havana
E.S. (segment "Diary of a Beginner")
Bamako
Cow-boy
Nelson Mandela: The Myth and Me
Self
Chronicle of a Disappearance
E.S.
A Special Day
Self
To Each His Own Cinema
The filmmaker (segment "Irtebak")
It Must Be Heaven
E.S.
Critic
Self
Homage by Assassination
E.S.
The Gulf War... What Next?
Kusturica - Balkan's Bad Boy
Himself
The Arab Dream
Himself
War and Peace in Vesoul
Cyber Palestine
Writer
Introduction to the End of an Argument
Director
Only Lovers Left Alive
Thanks
And Then They Burn the Sea
Thanks