
Director
Maroun Bagdadi
Born 1950 · Lebanon
Maroun Bagdadi (Arabic: مارون بغدادي; January 21, 1950 – December 11, 1993) was a Lebanese film director known for his vivid portrayal of Lebanon's civil war. Bagdadi was internationally the best-known Lebanese filmmaker of his generation. He worked with American producer/director Francis Coppola and made several films in French that became hits in France. Maroun Bagdadi was arguably Lebanon's most prominent filmmaker, one whose work has been seen all over the world. One of his best-known films, Houroub Saghira (Little Wars), was shown at the 1982 Cannes Film Festival, drawing this comment from a prominent film critic: "To make a film about Beirut that eschews polemics for more universal, more human issues is an achievement." His first Lebanese production was for television, an educational program called 7½. In 1975, he directed his first feature film, Beyrouth Ya Beyrouth. Koullouna Lil Watan, a 75-minute documentary produced in 1979, won the Jury Honor Prize at the International Leipzig Festival Documentary and Animated Film.
Directed

We Are All for the Fatherland
Director · 1979
Médecins des hommes
Director · 1988

Beirut, Oh Beirut
Director · 1975

Out of Life
Director · 1991

The Girl in the Air
Director · 1992

Chillers
Director · 1990

Greetings to Kamal Jumblatt
Director · 1977

The Little Wars
Director · 1982

The Most Beautiful of All Mothers
Director · 1978

The Story of a Village and a War
Director · 1979
War on War
Director · 1983

Whispers
Director · 1980

The Veiled Man
Director · 1987
Les Jupons de la révolution
Director · 1989
Achoura
Director · 1984

Lebanon, the Land of Honey and Incense
Director · 1988

