Reclaiming Time (2025)

Origin: France, Palestine | Documentary | Director: Fuad Hindieh | not found minutes

Reclaiming Time

Palestinian filmmaker Fuad Hindieh no longer believes in the age printed on his ID. So he sets out to legally change his date of birth—through the Israeli Ministry of Interior Affairs. As a resident of Jerusalem, Fuad must make this request to the very system of occupation that has long stolen his time, movement, experiences and opportunities. It’s a darkly comic paradox: like asking the wind to return what it has blown away—or the thief to write your receipt. What begins as a surreal legal petition becomes a deeper meditation on time under occupation: how it’s felt, controlled, and erased. At first, Fuad turns his camera outward, gathering stories from others. But when his lawyer urges him to focus on his own file, the film shifts inward. Blending dark comedy, reenactments, and archival echoes, Reclaiming Time is a cinematic case file on memory, absurdity, and aging in a place where time doesn’t flow—it fractures. Whether time can truly be reclaimed remains unresolved— but the act of trying leaves a mark.

About the trailer: This video was created during the research phase and uses existing footage. It’s meant to share context about the project—especially for those unfamiliar with Palestine—and doesn’t reflect the film’s final style or cinematic language.


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