Nadia El Fani
Directing
Known For

Born in Ukraine in 2008 in the wake of the "Orange Revolution," the feminist movement Femen fights for democracy, freedom of the press, women's rights, and against corruption, prostitution, sexism, racism, poverty, and religion. The activists quickly caught the attention of the media with their shocking protests. In 2012, at the creation of Femen France, Caroline Fourest followed their actions. They notably affirmed their support for "Marriage for All" by protesting on November 18, 2012, during the demonstration organized by the Civitas Institute against the bill, provoking sharp clashes.
They Fight: Our Breasts, Our Weapons

In the contemporary Tunisian thriller Bedwin Hacker, a female media pirate - holed up in a remote outpost in the mountains of Tunisia - figures out a way to take over the television and radio airwaves in France and North Africa to broadcast political messages. The irritated French Intelligence service closes in on her, which leads to a tit-for-tat game of intrigue between the hacker and her pursuers.
Bedwin Hacker
No description available.
Même pas mal

The film documents the lives and experiences of ex-Muslims: people who have left Islam to become atheists, and who often face discrimination, harassment, ostracism and violence for leaving Islam, both in the UK and abroad.
Islam's Non-Believers

Filmmaker Nadia el Fani explores secularism in the predominantly Muslim country of Tunisia before and after the fall of Ben Ali.
Neither Allah, Nor Master!
No description available.
Capitale Parenthèse

A man is trying to find himself at the Père Lachaise cemetery in Paris. There he meets a woman who is trying to find a place for a very special grave.
Unissez-vous, il n'est jamais trop tard !

Two young women sculpt a man's body out of clay for the sheer pleasure of it.
Pour le plaisir

Nadia El Fani leaves her house one morning to protest… alone all by herself.
Tant qu'il y aura de la pelloche
A tender but brash short film about the feeling of living in two worlds at once. Meriem, the child of Tunisian-French parentage, shuttles back and forth between Paris and Tunis, and between two men. It takes a long time for her to decide where she belongs.
Fifty-Fifty, My Love

Between 1992 and 1993, in the midst of the Algerian civil war, a group of women from the Maghreb met in Tunisia to discuss their political commitment and their stance on violence.
Du côté des femmes leaders

The heritage of Carthaginian women still survives in Tunisian traditions.