Meryam Joobeur

Meryam Joobeur Trailers

Who Do I Belong To TrailerBrotherhood TrailerBorn in the Maelstrom Trailer

Meryam Joobeur is a Tunisian Canadian film director. She is most noted for her 2018 short film Brotherhood (Ikhwène), which won the Toronto International Film Festival Award for Best Canadian Short Film at the 2018 Toronto International Film Festival and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film at the 92nd Academy Awards. Raised in Tunisia and the United States, she is currently based in Montreal, Quebec, where she is a graduate of the Cinema-Communications program at Dawson College and the Mel Hoppenheim School of Cinema at Concordia University. Prior to Brotherhood, she wrote and directed the short films Gods, Weeds and Revolutions (2012) and Born in the Maelstrom (2017). In 2020, Joobeur was one of the recipients of the 2020 Top 25 Canadian Immigrant Awards. Her debut feature film went into development in 2021, with the working title Motherhood. Joobeur participated in the Sundance Screenwriters' Lab at the 2021 Sundance Film Festival, where she was awarded the $10,000 Sundance Institute/NHK Award toward the film's production. The film is slated to premiere at the 74th Berlin International Film Festival, as Who Do I Belong To (Mé el Aïn).

Most Popular Meryam Joobeur Trailers

Total trailers found: 4

Who Do I Belong To Trailer (2024)

01 November 2024

Aicha, a Tunisian mother gifted with prophetic dreams, lives in the isolated north of Tunisia with her husband Brahim and young son Adam.

Brotherhood Trailer (2020)

10 February 2020

Mohamed is a hardened shepherd living in rural Tunisia with his wife and two sons. Mohamed is deeply shaken when his oldest son Malik returns home after a long journey with a mysterious new wife.

Born in the Maelstrom Trailer (2017)

05 October 2017

Rebecca is an eighteen-year-old biracial girl bound in an imaginary world shaped by her black mother’s painful past.

Gods, Weeds and Revolutions Trailer (2012)

01 October 2012

A young woman returns to Tunisia and must come to terms with her grandfather's illness and the country's dark past under dictatorship.