🎬 Between Cairo and Paris, French-Egyptian filmmaker Namir Abdel Messeeh has developed a distinct cinematic language that goes far beyond mere documentation. His work actively deconstructs the nuances of migration, displacement, and the traditional narratives that define family life.
These deeply personal explorations have earned him significant international acclaim — including accolades for Best Documentary at both the Malmö Arab Film Festival and the El Gouna Film Festival for his poignant film, Life After Siham.
EnterpriseAM sat down with Abdel Messeeh to discuss the camera as a shield — a tool to capture truth and resist the fading of memory. We explored family cinema in his latest work — 10 years in the making — the hurdles of Egyptian documentary filmmaking, and the looming threat AI poses to historical record. Edited excerpts from our conversation:
EnterpriseAM: How would you introduce yourself?
Namir Abdel Messeeh: I do not favor the idea of self-definition or placing myself within a specific framework. If you ask me who I am, I would simply say I am Namir. I might add the title of director depending on the context of the situation, but I tend to stay away from rigid definitions.
E: In your works, we noticed a theme related to a clear desire for documentation, yet it is surrounded by doubt and conflicting narratives. When does that moment of doubt turn into a cinematic project?
NAM: It is more about the relationship between reality and what we believe about it — essentially, how we cope with truth when multiple versions of it exist. My upbringing between Egyptian and French cultures created a constant contradiction within me, which is the primary driver of my films.
My recurring question in films is: How do we see different things despite living in the same place? Why do some acknowledge seeing an event while others deny it, even though they are in the same spot? Is there an absolute truth, or is truth merely the way we look at the world through our own vision? I try to answer these questions in my movies. Ultimately, I reach the conviction that the only truth is the existence of contradictory stories, and we must build our identities through them without trying to prove the validity of one narrative at the expense of another.
E: You previously spoke about using the camera as a protective tool. Do you feel it grants you the space to ask questions you might be unable to ask in your private life?
NAM: Certainly, the camera is my primary means of confrontation. That is how my relationship with it began; the director within me is always braver. When confrontations intensify in my personal life, I call upon it to take the lead and do what I fail to do as an ordinary person. What I strive for in my films is to find a balance between these two worlds.
E: How does your family cope with the idea of having an artist among them who might take out his camera and start filming at any moment?
NAM: At first, it was strange to them, especially my father, who initially did not grasp the utility of what I was doing. By nature, he’s a very reserved person who doesn't like talking about himself or appearing before people, and what I was doing completely contradicted his nature. But with repetition, he began to understand my motives, and it became part of our family life, to the point where he grew accustomed to the presence of the cinematographer among us at home.
E: With this familiarity, do you not fear they might start acting or assuming a certain role in front of the lens?
NAM: On the contrary, familiarity created greater spontaneity. If someone were bothered by the camera, it would show clearly, and that is the naturalness I look for. I don’t like acting. The presence of the camera undoubtedly changes the dynamics of a place, but this change in itself is the truth. Pretending the camera isn’t there is the height of acting, whereas interacting with it honestly is what reveals the person’s true nature.
E: In Life After Siham, you filmed your mother’s funeral, which is a private and painful moment. Where does the film begin and where does the human crisis end at that moment?
NAM: At that moment, the son was never present; I was merely a director. I handled the funeral with a director’s eye because I was unable to face it as a son. The pain was greater than my endurance, and the camera was my way of escaping it. After many years, I was finally able to experience those feelings I failed to face back then. When I returned to those scenes later, I empathized with myself. I realized I turned to filming because grief exceeded my capacity to cope, and I saw a direct reflection of that in the shots.
E: You documented moments in the film where your children refused to be filmed. When does the boundary of your role as a director end and your role as a father begin?
NAM: The truth is that this question still haunts me, and I have not found a definitive answer yet. Do I have the right to film them and share these clips in a movie? I preferred to present this inquiry within the film itself for the audience to face. The issue goes beyond me personally to affect every father and mother who documents their children’s lives despite the little ones’ occasional objections.
As for my children, their reactions varied. My daughter, for example, initially saw the film through the eyes of a teenager concerned with her appearance, then she began to realize deeper dimensions over time, even feeling proud when she saw her photos in the Paris Metro. I am confident that when she watches it years from now, it will leave a different impact on her.
E: How do you feel when films containing the details of your life and family are screened before viewers in cinemas?
NAM: During the first screening of the film, I felt an overwhelming desire to disappear. I asked myself, “Why did I do this? Am I crazy?” But I feel that once the editing is finished, the film detaches from me and lives its own life, becoming the property of the audience; it is no longer my personal responsibility. It’s a painful but necessary moment of separation.
E: How does an independent director face the funding dilemma, especially when presenting cinema that does not adhere to traditional commercial standards?
NAM: Funding remains the biggest obstacle. It is difficult to convince any entity to finance an experimental journey that begins without a roadmap or a prior script, as the final features of the film are shaped at the finish line. In this case, you do not have a tangible product that can be marketed. Therefore, I mostly collaborate with partners who believe in my vision or trust my cinematic path.
Additionally, I do not make a living from art directly, so I work in other fields to be able to fund my projects. There are those who can provide good commercial works with high artistic quality, but this is not my way. What I am trying to say is that a creator should not have to compromise their vision under the pressure of financing.
E: Arab films sometimes face criticism for falling into the trap of trying to appease international festivals. How do you protect your films from these pressures?
NAM: I do not worry about this matter at all. My sole goal is to make an authentic film, without trying to highlight certain elements or avoid others to please any party. I do not think about how to reach festivals while working. I believe the real trap is a mental one that a filmmaker falls into when they lose connection with their reality. The only protection from it is sincerity to one's own vision without affectation.
E: We sometimes notice films achieving great success simply because they keep pace with a timely issue. Do you think the importance of the cause might overshadow artistic quality?
NAM: A film may achieve a triumph because the public needs to discuss its subject at a particular time, regardless of its artistic level. Quality is just one element among several that contribute to the success of a work; success cannot be reduced to quality alone unless the film meets its temporal context and the moment it is screened. Conversely, there may be very strong artistic works that do not find enough resonance because they did not intersect with public interests at that time.
E: How do you view the future of documentaries, archives, and visual memory in the age of artificial intelligence?
NAM: We are passing through an extremely dangerous stage. Artificial Intelligence will create a crisis of trust in our relationship with reality, to the point where future generations may not be able to distinguish between a real archive and digitally generated images. This technology is capable of falsifying the entirety of human memory. Even in the context of conflicts and wars, we see completely fabricated videos today circulating as facts.
Our minds are no longer sufficiently prepared to detect this manipulation or differentiate between what is real and what is artificial. Therefore, I believe our role as artists and journalists has become more important than ever, and our responsibility is to maintain our connection to the past, document what actually happened, and protect it from forgery. This era provides a unique opening to redefine truth, but it also means we must be vigilant. Fortunately, the unrestricted nature of digital tools allows us to reach audiences directly, but we must use that power to safeguard history.
(** Tap or click the headline above to read this story with all of the links to our background as well as external sources.)
Related