Bouchra
Bouchra (French pronunciation: [buʃ.ra]), originally titled For Aicha, is a 2024 Italian-Moroccan-American adult computer-animated arthouse drama film directed, written by, and starring Meriem Bennani and Orian Barki. Commissioned by Milan's Fondazione Prada and animated on the Blender platform, it is the first animated feature produced in Morocco and the first film directed by Bennani and Barki. Bennani voices the titular character—a queer Moroccan canid in Brooklyn, New York City—in a semi-autobiographical account which chronicles her personal and sexual exploration amid a series of telephone calls with her Casablanca mother.
The film is set in the same universe as 2 Lizards, a web series helmed by Bennani and Barki during the COVID-19 pandemic. Production lasted for two years as part of an art exhibition Bennani created for Prada's hometown facility, and involved nearly 20 crew members in New York. Live-action footage was used for the backgrounds, while Bouchra and Aicha's on-screen conversations—added in the later stages of production—were based on Bennani's actual recordings. Several other members of the 2 Lizards team returned for the follow-up, among them composer Flavien Berger. Amid creative struggles and script rewrites, Bennani sought to conceive a story that would resonate with both Western and Middle Eastern audiences.
Bouchra debuted at the Prada premises under its original name, For Aicha, on 31 October 2024. Through a retitled and re-edited version, the film made its festival debut in Toronto and New York's 2025 editions, marking Bennani's first appearance at those venues in three years. It became the first animated work nominated for Toronto's Platform Prize, an honour that Ukrainian live-action candidate To the Victory! ultimately won. A month afterward, it received the Gold Q-Hugo at the Chicago International Film Festival's LGBTQ+-oriented OutLook program. A U.S. release by Film Movement is slated for 2026, via international sales company Lucky Number.
Critics positively reviewed Bouchra, with many of them commenting on its cultural and LGBTQ+ themes, psychological motifs, blending of reality and filmed fiction, and its styles of animation and narrative. Several compared it to Disney's 2016 feature Zootopia and the works of Richard Linklater, but criticized the quality of the CGI and noted that the metafictional structure might be difficult to follow. The film was met with enthusiasm across its festival screenings and gained popularity with the furry userbase of the Letterboxd site.
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