Palestinian filmmaker Annemarie Jacir premiered Palestine 36 at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 5, presenting a period drama set during the 1936 Arab revolt under the British Mandate and framed to echo present-day realities. The film follows Palestinians navigating colonial rule and the arrival of European Jewish settlers, with an emphasis on how choices about resistance shape personal and communal fate. The cast includes Hiam Abbass, Saleh Bakri, and Jeremy Irons.
The feature has been selected as Palestine’s submission for the Academy Award for best international feature and secured North American distribution with Watermelon Pictures ahead of its TIFF bow, positioning the title for an awards-season campaign.
Jacir has described the project as contemporary in spirit despite its historical setting, an approach underscored by production challenges after October 7, 2023, when the team evacuated during the escalation of the Israel-Gaza war. The director and her collaborators have spoken about continuing to work through crisis, with the film itself framed as an artistic response to ongoing loss.
Context around the premiere has been inescapable: Palestinian fatalities in Gaza have mounted during Israel’s military operations, while Israeli authorities cite the October 7 attack and continued hostage-taking in explaining their actions. Jacir’s film situates its narrative decades earlier, but its debates about survival, dignity, and tactics mirror arguments still unfolding in the region, a resonance the filmmaker has acknowledged in recent remarks.
The festival listing presents Palestine 36 as an ensemble work moving between village life and Jerusalem, with British officials and local organizers intersecting across surveillance, revolt, and everyday rituals. That broader canvas, and the presence of high-profile performers, signals a bid to carry Palestinian historical memory into mainstream conversation as the film starts its rollout from Toronto.





















































