Ahmed Bedjaoui

Ahmed Bedjaoui Trailers

Narration in Motion Trailer

Ahmed Bedjaoui (in arabic : أحمد بجاوي), born in 1943 in Sebdou in Algeria, is a journalist, host, director, writer and an emblematic figure, the “Mister” of Algerian cinema. He hosted the famous Télé Ciné Club from 1969 to 1989. With his particular tone, but above all content, he introduced Algerians to the classics of cinema. He knew, with pedagogy, and the guests he invited to the set, how to dissect a film. We could see, with relish, the works of Alfred Hitchcock, Ingmar Bergman, Salah Abou Seif, and, of course, Algerian films. Ahmed Bedjaoui has had a solid career in the press, cinema and television. Graduated from IDHEC in 1966, and held a P.H.D. since 1983. in American literature with a thesis on Scott Fitzgerald and Hollywood. A freelance journalist in the written press since 1966, in charge, among other things, of the cinema, television and radio sections, he was successively from 1969, producer and presenter of programs on cinema on Algerian Television, programmer and head of archives at the Algerian Cinematheque from 1966 to 1971, and advisor to the general director of the Algerian Cinema Office (ONCIC) from 1971 to 1977. It was on this date that he was appointed Director of the film production department at Radio-Television Algerian, completing more than 70 feature films. Vice-president of the National Audiovisual Council from 1987 to 1991, he was also advisor for communications to the Algerian Prime Minister. After working as a consultant for the European Commission, since 1993 he has been director of the REMFOC network, an organization dedicated to the development of North African journalists. Advisor for cinema to the Algerian Minister of Communication in 2000, he was appointed Deputy Commissioner General for the Year of Algeria in France in 2003. He was commissioner of the Algerian film week, at the Maison des Cultures du Monde of Berlin. Laureate of the "Institut des Hautes Etudes Cinematographics" (IDHEC - Paris) and holder of a Doctorate in American literature, Ahmed BEDJAOUI is artistic director of the Algiers committed film festival and President of the Algerian Cinema Aid Fund. He is a university professor at the faculty of communication at Algiers University. Ahmed Bedjaoui is the author of five works: "Images and faces", "Cinema and war of liberation, battles of images", "Arab literature and cinemas", "The Algerian War in world cinema", " Cinema in its golden age” and “The Saga of the creation of the Algerian cinema library (1965-1969)”. In France in 2016, he received the title of Officer of Arts and Letters. In 2015, UNESCO awarded him the Féderico Fellini Medal for services to film culture around the world. In 2019, he is President of the Feature Film Jury at the 26th FESPACO, Ouaga, Burkina Faso.

Most Popular Ahmed Bedjaoui Trailers

Total trailers found: 5

Stories of the Revolution Trailer (1969)

02 January 1969

The film recounts in three parts by three different directors the Algerian people's struggle for independence after 130 years of French colonization: Ahmed Bedjaoui "Les Fedayines," Rabah Laradji "La Bombe," Sid Ali Mazif "Le Messager.

Boualem Zid El Goudam Trailer (1980)

01 January 1980

Two travelers, Boualem and Sekfali, cross the hostile and endless desert. Boualem pulls a cart on which old books, pictures, relics and memories of Sekfali are piled up.

Le Grand Détour Trailer (1968)

21 May 1968

The young Amar, father of two children, lives on expedients and looks in vain for a job in Algiers. He decides to emigrate to France, and finds a job there, but quickly loses it after a roundup and custody for several days.

The Epic of Cheikh Bouamama Trailer (1985)

07 January 1985

The story of the film revolves around the epic of Sheikh Bouamama, a leader of the national resistance in Algeria during the French colonial era.

Narration in Motion Trailer (2026)

13 May 2026

The film critic and historian Ahmed Bedjaoui recounts how Algeria became a global centre for militant cinema after the country achieved independence from France in 1962.