Enter your email Address

Fest_25_carre_retina
Fest_25_carre_retina
Make a donation Press
Fest_25_new_retina
  • La Jetée

    Clermont-Ferrand

    • Documentation Center
    • Regular Events
    • Short film screenings
    • Training
    • Seminars
    • All Shorts
  • Short Film 31 JAN. > 8 FEB.

    Festival

    • Participate
      • Overview
      • Submit a film
      • Become a volunteer
      • Student Juries
      • Survival guide for newcomers
      • Professionals
      • Ticket Office
    • Discover more
      • Catalogues
      • Festival Newsletter
      • Prizes 2024
      • Le Trombino
      • Code of conduct
      • Our commitments
      • La Brasserie du court
    • Useful information
      • Coming to Clermont-Ferrand
      • Accomodation
      • Restaurants
      • Festival Locations
    • Archives
  • Short Film 3 > 6 FEB.

    Market

    • Overview
    • MEDIA Rendez-vous
    • Euro Connection
    • Shortfilmwire+
    • Participate
      • On site
      • Remotely
    • Pro Reception Desk
    • Prepare my visit
  • Short Film

    Circulation
    • Circuit Court
    • Screen festival programs
    • Plein Champ Network
    • Shortfilmdepot
  • Short Cuts

    Professionnalisation

    • Residences
    • Training
    • Support
    • Workshops
  • Education and

    Training
    • Upcoming events
    • Actions
      • Young audience screenings
      • Educational workshops
      • Anatomies
      • L’Atelier
      • Young critics competition
        • Young critics competition 2018
        • Young critics competition 2017
      • Ciné en herbe
    • Devices
      • Culture at the hospital
      • Culture in prison
      • Kindergarten at the cinema
      • High school at the cinema
      • Cinema sections
    • Training
      • Short Film Festival
      • Teaching cinema
      • School and cinema
      • Middle school at the cinema
      • High school at the cinema
      • Cinema sections
      • PREAC cinema
      • MIRE / ESPE
    • Resources
      • Educational tools
      • Transmission impossible
      • Le fil des images
      • Transmettre le cinéma
      • Ressources by film
      • Côté Court – LDVTV
        • Côté Court 2019
        • Côté Court 2018
        • Vu en court 2017
        • Vu en court 2016
        • Vu en court 2015
        • Vu en court 2014
        • Vu en court 2013
        • Vu en court 2012
  • Our newsletters
  • News
  • Archives
  • About us
  • Team
  • Partners
  • Advertisement

© Sauve qui peut le court métrage

Legal Mentions | Privacy

  • FR
  • EN
  • Dinner with Qu’importe si les bêtes meurent [So What if the Goats Die]

    30 January 2020
    Festival, Meeting with…
    By Abla Kandalaft
    • capture-decran-2020-01-24-a-16-11-19

     

    Interview with Sofia Alaoui, director of Qu’importe si les bêtes meurent [So What if the Goats Die]

    Why did you choose this title?
    The title of the film was obvious to me even before writing the screenplay, when I started becoming interested in the Universe and extraterrestrials. I found that there was something in these subjects that went beyond questions about material things, everyday things with which we can be confronted. The “goats” in the title refers to something coming from the earth and I think that the title sparks a thrust towards something else. That’s sort of the initial intention, to look elsewhere…

    What is happening in the sky? Or are we supposed to guess what’s happening?
    I prefer not to say! That’s really the question my character is asking himself and that will shock him when he discovers what it is. What’s going on in the sky is an excuse to confront my character (and others, of course) with the discovery a new, unknown world which seems frightening at first because it challenges an entire way of thinking.

    What prompted you to tell this story?
    I grew up in Morocco, a country with strong dogmas (and not just in the religious realm.) It’s difficult to doubt, to question a belief shared by a group. The question of extraterrestrial life has always fascinated me because it enables us to question our certainties and absolute truths. Would the proven existence of extraterrestrials change our way of believing? From the onset I wanted to tell a story that doesn’t challenge these questions harshly. I like cinema that flirts with different genres, moving between documentary and fiction, between poetry and brutality in the way its staged. There was also the desire to tell a story set in an isolated village in the Atlas (the Moroccan mountain range.)   I find that these desert decors portray many things. In the beginning, there was indeed, the convergence of several wishes, both esthetic and fundamental which made me say “Bingo, I’ve got a film.”

    How did the shooting of the film go?
    The filming went very well on several points: artistic agreement with my chief operator, Noé Bach, so that we made a good team; I had a super script, a fantastic assistant director, and, working with non-professional actors was an immense pleasure. I tested a way to work and to direct the actors on this project. They had never read the scenario. Before shooting, I told them what was going to happen and take place in the scene, in what emotional state the characters were in. It was very interesting for me. In fact, Fouad, the main character, admitted to me that every night he would write down the scenes that we had shot in a notebook in order to have the scenario of the film, which of course he didn’t have. One morning he came to see me and said: “Frankly, it looks like an awesome film, I can’t wait to know the ending.” Obviously, the end of the film was shot the last day. It was somewhat of a surprise for the actors. But other than that, I have to admit that filming was a real battle given that we were deep in the Atlas: we worked crazy hours and quite honestly, I have to say , it’s complicated to make an ambitious short film in Morocco. There aren’t many professional short films in Morocco. People are used to making big American films so right away your little short, no one cares much, and people, when they see a camera, they think you have money and want you to dish it out. Even blocking off streets was hell! Especially because I wanted an empty village, deserted (whereas the town was really full of life.) When I look at certain shots again, I think about all we went through to get them, it’s really somewhat of a miracle.  You have to imagine that there were sometimes something like, I don’t know, a hundred people behind us looking at the set as if it were a stage in a theatre. So, for the sound, you can imagine that we had to redo everything in post-production!

    What are your next projects?
    I’m working on my first feature-length film that I developed during my year in the Femis Screenwriting Workshop and in parallel I developed my first series with Barney Production. These are two Moroccan projects and that’s quite exciting!

    Would you say that the short film format has given you any particular freedom?
    I directed several shorts and videos and it’s true that I have the impression that that helped me to get to know myself by trying to experiment with different things. My approach to directing actors, to staging, to the other technicians on the set has matured through these different projects. I feel I’m ready to move on to a longer format!

    Qu’importe si les bêtes meurent [So What if the Goats Die] is being shown in the National Competition F8.

    auvergne, competition, national
    Networks
    Recent posts
    • 2025 Panorama: geographical focus

      6 November 2024
    • 2025 panorama: Theme in focus

    • 2025 OST Challenge

    • Clermont-Ferrand Short Film Festival unveils 2025 poster

      19 September 2024
    • 23rd Lab Competition

      17 December 2023
    • 36th International Competition

    • 46th National Competition

    • 2024: A singular edition

      16 November 2023
    • Kickstarter x ClermontFF

      3 November 2023
    Blog
    Breakfast avec L’âge tendre
    Night cap with Aline
    0
  • FR
  • EN
  • Ville de Clermont-Ferrand Département du Puy-de-Dôme Clermont Métropole CNC Ministère de la culture et de la communication Région Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes Europe Media
    All partners
    Clermont ISFF | Dinner with Qu’importe si les bêtes meurent [So What if the Goats Die] | Clermont ISFF
    class="post-template-default single single-post postid-30299 single-format-standard samba_theme samba_left_nav samba_left_align samba_responsive fl-builder-2-8-6-1 thvers_104 framework_99 wpb-js-composer js-comp-ver-7.7.2 vc_responsive"