In 1999 she moved to Tunisia. A year later, she returned to Paris and started her career as a filmmaker and as a writer.
As a child, Albou was always involved with dance and singing. After high school, Karin continued to study dance, but also studied literature and drama, eventually enrolling in a film school in Paris. She studied screenwriting but discovered she wanted to be a director while taking classes at École Supérieure de Réalisation Audiovisuelle. After graduating, she released her first short film, Hush!.
Career
Albou made her feature film debut in 2005 with Little Jerusalem, which debuted in the International Critics' Week section at the 2005 Cannes Film Festival. Despite being Albou's first feature film, she was disqualified from competing for the Camera d'Or, awarded to the best first film playing at the festival, because she had previously directed a made-for-TV movie.[3]
In 2008 Albou released her second feature film The Wedding Song, a Holocaust drama set in Tunisia in 1942 that was loosely inspired by letters Albou's paternal grandmother had sent to her husband during the war when he was sent to a labour camp.[4] The film played multiple Jewish festivals but failed to garner mainstream attention, something Albou attributed to the many scenes of graphic nudity in the film.[5] Albou's third feature film My Shortest Love Affair, which she co-starred in, was released in 2015.[6]
Styles and themes
Karin's heritage explains some of the themes she chooses to cover. Raised in the Jewish faith, Karin's films explore the lasting trauma of the Holocaust[7] – French colonialism,[8] secret identity,[9] exile, assimilation,[10] and double diaspora.[11]
The director also explores and challenges the rules of religion and marriage and the themes of love, sex and family values.[12] Her themes involve bringing intimate scenes of female spaces, tackling sexual dysfunction in marriage and uncovering how culture impacts the idea of romance.[13] Karin keeps these themes consistent in her films and portrays them with her unique film style. Her style focuses on the representation of women.[14] In The Wedding Song, the film style displays a lesbian, female, and Orientalist gaze.
^Al-Hossain, Haya Abdulrahman (2011). Feminist representations in North African cinema (Thesis). The George Washington University. pp. 168–169. ProQuest861742163.
Zimmermann, Nayeli, Eric Van Grasdorff, and Patrick Gschwind. "Namibian Premiere of the Tunisian/French Film "The Wedding Song", Directed by Karin Albou, WED, 14 March 2012, 18:30h, FNCC."
Al-Hossain, Haya Abdulrahman (2011). Feminist representations in North African cinema (Thesis). The George Washington University. pp. 168–169. ProQuest861742163.
Griffin, John. "Secret Identity, Sumptuous Film:" The Gazette, Oct 29, 2005.