"Ten Arab Filmmakers contributes in a positive, meaningful way to the general advancement of MENA studies in American institutions of higher education, encouraging students and the general public to learn about the Arab world from diverse perspectives."
~Journal of North African Studies
"Gugler has done an admirable job taking the reader on a complex but passionate journey through the work of ten Arab fi lmmakers."
~Black Camera
"Illustrated with arresting stills and superbly edited, this volume is sharp, incisive, and thought provoking. . . . Essential."
~Choice
"Ten Arab Filmmakers represents a timely and important resource for educators, scholars, and students."
~Studies in Eastern European Cinema
"This volume offers perceptive essays on ten filmmakers from the Arab world, covering a wide span of countries and representing older as well as younger generations. Free of academic jargon and notable for their general accessibility, the essays, by authors from a variety of disciplines, provide biographies of the directors, characterize their dominant interests, themes, and aesthetic concerns, and closely examine individual films. The collection greatly enriches our understanding of the strains and tensions within individual countries and across the region, helping us appreciate the complexity of the region's filmmaking context and the region's immense cultural vitality."
~Kevin Dwyer, author of Beyond Casablanca: M. A. Tazi and the Adventure of Moroccan Cinema
"[A] welcome addition to the scholarship on Arab film. . . . [I]ncludes a rich and well selected mix of important directors from across the region [and offers] an authoritative and comprehensive accounting of each director's biography, his or her important works, and the political, social, and cultural contexts in which she or he has worked. Clearly written and accessible, Ten Arab Filmmakers will be a welcome addition to university courses on Arab cinema. It will inform students' viewings of these filmmakers' works and facilitate their understanding of the contexts from which they emerged and in which they circulate."
~Nadia Yaqub, University of North Carolina