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Director's Statement
About writing MEDITERRANEAN FEVER I am a filmmaker who has a melancholic state of mind along with a sense of humor. This led me to write a thriller-drama about Waleed, a 40-year-old aspired writer suffering from chronic depression. Through this fictional male character, I pushed my opinions and daily thoughts to extremes. I know Waleed’s character and I am familiar with it. I developed a mockery of my dark side through a person that is similar yet different from me. While playing with life and death themes, I took Waleed to extremes that I never would have dared to reach. My first film, PERSONAL AFFAIRS, expressed the identity of Palestinians living in Israel, on the West Bank, and in exile. The characters suffered from frustration, imprisonment, and hopelessness because of the complexity of their being Palestinians, the very same frustration and imprisonment from which Waleed, as a Palestinian living in Haifa, keeps on suffering. In this film, and for this reason, I chose to focus on one personality and express the depression of an individual, in contrast to the one of an entire society. One will find that Waleed’s life is comforting and that it contains many most-demanding elements – such as a loving wife, happy children, comfortable parents, and a beautiful home –, elements of a successful and happy person which bring out the American dream in mainstream Hollywood movies. However, this is where my understanding of depression comes in; something deep, dark and mysterious is always missing. Eventually, Waleed reaches a dead end and decides that he is the only one who knows what his fate will be. He decides to put an end to his life to make it look like a natural death because of the responsibilities that come with being a father. I introduced Waleed’s character to Jalal, a personality that I have always been drawn to. Jalal is a small-time crook, simple, optimistic, full of life and too down-to-earth to fall into depression. He is Waleed’s opposite. As a result, their encounter creates a comic scenario that is able to shed light on darkness in Waleed’s story. The two worlds shared by each of the two friends are what gives the characters their depth and a remedy to their existentialist crisis. About shooting in Haifa One third of Haifa’s population are Palestinians. Since the 1948 Occupation, some of its neighbourhoods and districts remained into ruins and neglected poor areas, like Wadi Saleeb, Wadi Nisnass, Halleesa, only to name a few. I shot in these districts to show the Palestinian side of the city. The film was shot in autumn, to yet again reveal the sad tormented aspect of this city, with the cloudy grey skies and the stormy dark sea. These colors and this sad mood contribute to Waleed’s depression and torment. About the actors Since it’s a character-driven film, the choice of the cast was of the utmost importance. It’s interesting that the two main actors were chosen in a completely different process: with Amer Hlehel, the minute I started writing the script, I thought of him as Waleed. One day, we sat together in a coffee shop and I told him briefly about the story and Waleed’s character. When he accepted to play Waleed, it helped me a lot while writing the character, because I had then Amer in mind, and it helped me develop the character. With Jalal it was a different story. I didn’t have any specific actor in mind and there were many auditions for that part, all of them were good I must say, but they weren’t Jalal, something was missing. The minute that Ashraf Farah walked into the room and read the first line, I saw Jalal, I saw him clearly and I was 100% sure of my choice. With the matching between him and Amer I saw my story unfolding in front of my eyes. About the title This disease affects people living in the Mediterranean area, it is a disease connected to that place. But the film talks about our other diseases: political, social and psychological diseases. I wanted to give a specificity to this particular place through this specific disease. It’s as if this disease is actually a real one in the movie, but in fact what I’m concerned about are those other diseases, those that are not examined in a medical lab or left undiagnosed and untreated. About Waleed’s depression Waleed is depressed but “still functioning”. That’s why it is called “functioning depression”. Waleed lives his depression on a daily basis, while walking in the streets, cleaning the house, being a father to his kids, or a true person in every aspect of his life. His depression wraps him, gradually devours him, but he is still living his life. He is also a father that loves his kids. A person suffering from depression is by no means indifferent to life or careless to others, or numb. It is quite the opposite, he cares too much about everything, and too much is the world within himself. That also may explain his care/his interest/his obsession with politics.