Palestine 36
Palestine 36 is a 2025 historical drama written and directed by Annemarie Jacir. The film recounts the 1936–1939 Arab revolt against British colonial rule in Palestine during the Mandate period. It stars Hiam Abbass, Kamel El Basha, Yasmine Al Massri, Jalal Altawil, Robert Aramayo and Saleh Bakri.
The film had its world premiere in the Gala Presentations section of the 2025 Toronto International Film Festival on 5 September, to a 20 minute standing ovation. It was selected as the Palestinian entry for the Academy Award for [Best International Feature Film|Best International Feature Film] at the 98th Academy Awards, making the December shortlist. The film received generally positive reviews critics, with some criticism towards its historical inaccuracies.
The film has been banned in Israel.
Cast
- Hiam Abbass as Hanan
- Kamel El Basha as Abu Rabab
- Yasmine Al Massri as Khuloud Atef
- Jalal Altawil as Father Boulos
- Robert Aramayo as Captain Orde Wingate
- Saleh Bakri as Khalid
- Yafa Bakri as Rabab
- Karim Daoud Anaya as Yusuf Bassawi
- Wardi Eilabouni as Afra
- Ward Helou as Kareem
- Mo’min Swaitat as Sameh
- Billy Howle as Thomas Hopkins
- Dhaffer L'Abidine as Amir Atef
- Liam Cunningham as Charles Tegart
- Jeremy Irons as High Commissioner Arthur Wauchope
- Yumna Marwan as Um Kareem
- Sam Hoare as Diplomat Charles
- Christopher Villiers as Radio Broadcaster
- Sam Peace as British Soldier
Production
In February 2025, it was announced Hiam Abbass, Kamel El Basha, Yasmine Al Massri, Jalal Altawil, Robert Aramayo, Saleh Bakri, Yafa Bakri, Karim Daoud Anaya, Wardi Eilabouni, Ward Helou, Billy Howle, Dhafer L'Abidine, Liam Cunningham and Jeremy Irons had joined the cast of the film, with Annemarie Jacir directing from a screenplay she wrote. Curzon Film and MAD Distribution will distribute the film in the United Kingdom and Middle East, respectively.Principal photography was set to take place in Palestine; however, the Gaza war in 2023 postponed production. Later they were able to return and finish production, making it the only feature film to shoot in Palestine in the past two years.
Release
The film had its world premiere in the Gala Presentations section of the 2025 Toronto International Film Festival on 5 September, to a 20 minute standing ovation. It received its European premiere as part of the Official Selection BFI London Film Festival 2025. The film was released in the United Kingdom on 31 October 2025, by Curzon Film. It won Best Film at the Tokyo International Film Festival in November 2025.It was one of three films on Palestinian history to be List of submissions to the [98th Academy Awards for Best International Feature Film|submitted to the 98th Academy Awards for Best International Feature Film] – the others being All That's Left of You and The Voice of Hind Rajab.
Curzon Film released the film in the United Kingdom on 31 October 2025. Haut et Court released the film in France on 14 January 2026. Prior to TIFF, Watermelon Pictures acquired the U.S. distribution rights to the film.
The film has been banned for screening in Israel. During a raid on 22 January on a screening in East Jerusalem, Israeli police alleged that the projectionist was screening a film promoting work by a terrorist organization. The production company denied the allegations. Jacir has appealed against the ban.
Reception
rates the film at 100% rating on Rotten Tomatoes|100%], based on 26 reviews, including 8 Top Critics.The Guardian gave the film 3 stars describing it as an "emotionally stirring drama follows a year of brutal conflict in the Middle East with a huge cast of characters caught up in the turmoil". The review continues: "This is a heartfelt film, if rather stolidly paced and sometimes pedagogically conveyed. The cast includes such Palestinian heavyweight actors as Hiam Abbass and Saleh Bakri as passionate rebels. Jeremy Irons plays the high commissioner Sir Arthur Wauchope who presides with bland complacency over this troublesome possession. The other colonials are divided, in the traditional style, into “good British” – Billy Howle as a troubled and ineffectually pro-Arab civil servant – and “bad British” – Robert Aramayo as the brutal Captain Orde Wingate, who here personifies the arrogance and cruelty of the coloniser, shooting civilians in cold blood and ordering the collective punishment of entire villages".
Variety said, "'Prescient' is perhaps the most appropriate word to describe Palestine 36" and "The performances are uniformly excellent and in tandem with each other — true ensemble work where each actor complements his screen partners.The one missed note is Robert Aramayo as the villainous British military captain, who’s missing only a twirling mustache in how caricatured the character is written and performed."
The Financial Times described it as "a rousing historical epic that chronicles the failed birth of a nation, and the brutal quelling of rebels seeking to resist Arab displacement precipitated by swiftly rising Jewish migration", and quoted Jacir as saying: “It’s the Palestinian point of view of that period”. The New Arab described it as "an epic historical drama that serves as a timely antidote to the 1960 film Exodus". Sheri Linden from The Hollywood Reporter praised the film for offering more "facets and nuances" than Exodus, which she described as "Hollywood's star-studded paean to Zionism". The Irish Times praised it as an "handsome, old-fashioned production" for validating the "worst suspicions" of British colonial rule in Palestine.
Oren Kessler criticised what he said was the film's ahistorical treatment in The Free Press, asserting that it framed the revolt as a "morality play of colonial cruelty and Arab resistance", while reducing the revolt's main targets – the Jews of Mandatory Palestine – to largely voiceless, caricatured figures and being "silent beneficaries" of British Imperialism. Robert Cherry of The Times of Israel wrote that the film overlooks the revolt's continuation of a decade of violence against Jewish communities and omits any mention of its leader, the Grand Mufti Amin al-Husseini. Cherry alleged that the film's positive reception was due to the reviewers' acceptance of Palestine 36