Search Site

Trends banner

Alpha Dhabi H1 profit $1.79bn

Adjusted EBITDA rises to $2.36bn.

Borouge Q2 net profit $193m

The H1 revenue stood at $2.72 billion.

ADNOC Drilling H1 revenue $2.37bn

The company posted a net profit of $692m.

Eni profit falls due to dip in oil prices

Q2 net profit fell by 18% to $637 million.

Emirates NBD H1 profit $3.40bn

Total income rose by 12 percent in the same period.

Kuwait bars film from screening for showing trans actor

PARK CITY, UTAH - JANUARY 21: Zoe Terakes attends the 2023 Sundance Film Festival "Talk to Me" Premiere at Egyptian Theatre on January 21, 2023 in Park City, Utah. Jerod Harris/Getty Images/AFP (Photo by Jerod Harris / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP)
  • The film titled 'Talk to Me', which is currently in theatres in the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia, features transgender Australian actor Zoe Terakes.
  • Gulf Arab states, including Kuwait, the UAE and Saudi Arabia -- all of which outlaw homosexuality -- routinely censor films that contain LGBTQ references.

Kuwait City, Kuwait – Kuwait has banned a horror film featuring a transgender actor, authorities told AFP on Monday, despite the movie screening in other parts of the Gulf region.

The film titled ‘Talk to Me’, which is currently in theatres in the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia, features transgender Australian actor Zoe Terakes but no explicit references in any of its scenes.

Kuwaiti authorities have “banned the screening of the Australian film, Talk to Me” which was scheduled for release last week, Hisham Alghanim, vice chairman of the Kuwait National Cinema Company, told AFP.

The reasons for the ban “are unknown until now”, he said.

Kuwait’s information ministry was not immediately available for comment.

Gulf Arab states, including Kuwait, the UAE and Saudi Arabia — all of which outlaw homosexuality — routinely censor films that contain LGBTQ references.

Most recently, they banned the latest Spider-Man animation in June, reportedly over a scene that includes a transgender pride flag.

Terakes on Sunday criticized the move to ban the film in Kuwait.

“Our film doesn’t have queer themes,” Terakes said in a statement posted on social media.

“I am a trans actor who happened to get the role. I’m not a theme. I’m a person,” added Terakes, who identifies as non-binary and previously appeared in the acclaimed TV series Nine Perfect Strangers.