Thirteen films are included in this year’s Muhr Emirati section, including a record-high six features – quite an achievement considering that 10 years ago the UAE had barely produced six features in total.
The most high profile is The Worthy, which marks a return to home festival action for the leading light of Emirati cinema, Ali F Mostafa. His previous film, the road movie From A to B, opened the 2014 edition of the Abu Dhabi Film Festival, while The Worthy, a post-apocalyptic dystopian thriller, had its world premiere in October at the London Film Festival.
The Muhr judges do not award prizes on filmmaker profile alone, however, and also hotly tipped for this year's prize is two-time former Muhr winner Nujoom Al Ghanem, who brings her new documentary Honey, Rain and Dust, which is about honey production in the Northern Emirates.
Ahmed Zain is another award-winning Emirati director who returns with a new feature film at this year's festival. He is also one of the few Emirati directors to achieve proper cinema releases of his previous features: 2013's comedy/horror Grandmother's Farm and its 2015 sequel. He brings to Diff Lisa, a comedy-drama about a British student who makes a documentary about Emirati family life.
Abdulla Al Kaabi also makes a return to the festival with his debut feature, Only Men Go to the Grave, a drama set at the end of the Iran-Iraq war. Al Kaabi previously won awards at the Abu Dhabi Film Festival, but is perhaps best known for casting French star Jean Reno (Léon: The Professional) in his 2011 Diff short film entry, The Philosopher.
The feature selection is completed by Hani Al Shaibani and Khalid Ali's drama, Waiting List, and Mansoor Alyabhouni Al Dhaheri's era-hopping historical epic, Little Sparta.
Al Dhaheri is no stranger to the festival, having previously competed for Muhr awards in 2012 and 2013.
In addition, there are seven UAE productions competing for the short-film award.

