Kamal Aljafari’s father strategically placed a security camera outside his house to record whoever was repeatedly smashing his car windows. Through these fragile and fuzzy images, the filmmaker turned the spotlight onto the movements and elements that most interested him. This exercise in detective work reveals the everyday routines of a neighborhood perpetually beset by precariousness and violence. As Aljafari himself said: “On my father’s camera, everyone has the opportunity to exist.” An Unusual Summer is a low-definition yet poetically captivating homage to the neighborhood of his childhood in Ramla, which the Israelis treat as a ghetto, thus exemplifying the inherent tensions pervasive throughout the region. (JHE)
Born in Ramla, Palestine, in 1972, Kamal Aljafari tirelessly collects and preserves images. The memory of his family and that of the Palestinian people serve as the foundation of his filmography, a creative corpus that exemplifies like no other the struggle to safeguard an identity under constant siege and threat. For Aljafari, the personal and the collective are inseparable. His quest entails finding absences in order to ensure their existence and survival. The materiality of cinema is therefore an obsession for this artist, who, film after film also challenges conventional ways of representing the Palestinian-Israeli conflict by spanning an immense range of forms that flow seamlessly from documentary to essay, and always from innovative aesthetic perspectives. His films demonstrate that another narrative is indeed possible and that, more than anything else, cinema continues to be a powerful tool for liberation.