عربي

Telfaz11 acquires indie film company Last Scene Films

Telfaz11 acquires indie film company Last Scene Films
  • Saudi entertainment group Telfaz11 has acquired Riyadh-based independent production house Last Scene Films.
  • Founded by Mohammed Alhamoud in 2017, Last Scene Films is specialised in producing independent features, documentaries and short films.
  • Telfaz11 was founded in 2011 by Alaa Yousef Fadan, Ali Al Kalthami and Ibrahim Al Khairallah and was one of the first production houses to focus on YouTube content in the region.
  • As part of the deal, Abumansour and Alhamoud will join the company and will report to Fadan. They will jointly continue to oversee the day-to-day business of Last Scene Films’ development and production slate, as well as develop and run Telfaz11’s film festival strategy.
  • At the end of 2020, Telfaz signed a deal with the global streaming platform Netflix.
  • Earlier this year, Saudi entertainment brand Muvi Cinemas acquired an undisclosed stake in the company as part of a deal aimed at boosting the creation of local content.

Source: Screen Daily

Burgeoning Saudi entertainment group Telfaz11 has acquired Riyadh-based independent production house Last Scene Films in a deal scaling up its move into feature film production.

Founded by Alaa Yousef Fadan, Ali Al Kalthami and Ibrahim Al Khairallah, Telfaz11, also based in Riyadh, was at the forefront of Saudi Arabia’s YouTube youth content revolution in the early 2010s. It is now a major player in its content boom following the lifting of the country’s 35-year cinema ban.

Specialising in producing independent arthouse features, documentaries and short films, Last Scene Films was founded in 2017 by Saudi cinema pioneer Mohammed Alhamoud. He was joined by Wael Abumansour an executive producer in 2020. 

The company’s debut feature Last Visit by Abdulmohsen Aldhabaan premiered at the East of the West Competition in Karlovy Vary International Film Festival in 2019 and won the jury prize at Marrakech International Film Festival the same year.

The company is developing Hussam AlHulwah’s feature Four Acts Of Disruption, set in 1930s Saudi Arabia as it adjusts to the arrival of US oil prospectors.

Prior to the lifting of Saudi Arabia’s cinema ban in 2017, Alhamoud was a co-founding member of the Talashi Film Collective, which was dedicated to making short films and screening them in film festivals in neighbouring territories a decade before cinemas opened in the country.

New strategy

As part of the Telfaz11 deal, Abumansour and Alhamoud will join the company and will report to Fadan. They will jointly continue to oversee the day-to-day business of Last Scene Films’ development and production slate, as well as develop and run Telfaz11’s film festival strategy. 

“It has always been part of our mission to be catalysts to the local creative culture while being at the forefront of producing new and fresh Saudi content with massive local appeal and relevance to local culture,” said Fadan. 

“With our current strategy to expand and focus our offering in the film and premium content space, we believe that the Last Scene transaction will support us in accelerating our mission and creating long-term value for the company and its shareholders.”

The deal follows a busy 12-month period for Telfaz11. At the end of 2020, it signed an eight-picture deal with Netflix and earlier this year, local exhibition chain Muvi Cinemas took an undisclosed stake in the company as part of a strategic partnership aimed at boosting the creation of local content.

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