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- A surreal film with a life-sized dummy as protagonist. A fairy tale-thriller about outsiders, represented by the Woodman. The Woodman is being chased by evil powers through his forest until he hides in the Woman's house. She is first frightened but feels sympathy for the Woodman. She has to leave, the Woodman is trapped. His refuge becomes his prison. The house is looked after by the Caretaker, who ultimately helps the Woodman escape. Will he find his way back home? This is the reverse of the usual representation: the Woodman wants to go home. Nobody was born to become a refugee.
- A feature film shot bit by bit over 30 years, reflecting alienation, longing, fear, escape with an experimental approach to style and narrative. A visual personal journey from when I left Baghdad at age 17, the stills and films becoming my diary recording my nightmares, my feelings, looking for a homeland that was so far removed by fear and wars. The style of the film is proof of my experiencing the world through my camera, I am a witness throughout my exile.
- Leaving Baghdad is a road movie that follows Sadik, the personal cameraman to the leader Saddam Hussein, at the end of the nineties. Sadik is trying to escape the grip of the regime, being pursued from country to country, encountering smugglers and crooks on his journey. Sadik suffers from paranoia and constant fear. The Iraqi secret police are after him because he is carrying evidence of the atrocities committed by the regime. Sadik is dreaming to go to London, to join his wife who is, however, unwilling to help. In his despair and loneliness, Sadik writes letters to his son, Semir. These letters turn into a confession and reveal Sadik's past and the real reason for his fleeing , the endless waiting and his paranoia.