Nabil Maleh

Nabil Maleh
September 28, 1936 (79 years old at death)
Damascus, Syria

Known for Directing

Nabil Maleh (September 28, 1936 – February 24, 2016) was a Syrian film director, screenwriter, producer, painter, and poet, widely regarded as a founding figure of modern Syrian cinema. Born in Damascus, he initially traveled to Czechoslovakia to study nuclear physics before discovering cinema and enrolling at the Film and TV School of the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague (FAMU), where he earned a master’s degree in film and television directing. His formative years in Prague immersed him in an international cultural environment that deeply shaped his artistic outlook. Upon returning to Syria in the mid-1960s, Maleh became the country’s first formally trained European film-school graduate and joined the newly established National Film Organization. His feature The Leopard (1972) brought Syrian cinema international recognition, winning the Special Prize at the Locarno Film Festival. Throughout the 1970s, he directed politically engaged films addressing themes of power, labor, war, and displacement, including works responding to the Palestinian struggle and the Vietnam War. Persistent censorship and political conflict led him to work extensively abroad. Maleh lived and taught in Europe and the United States, holding teaching positions at institutions including the University of Texas at Austin and the University of California, Los Angeles. Across his career, he directed approximately 12 feature films and more than 100 short, documentary, and experimental works, while also publishing over 1,000 articles, essays, poems, and short stories. His films received more than 60 international awards, including multiple lifetime achievement honors, and remain part of film-school curricula worldwide, securing his legacy as a central figure in Arab and world cinema.

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