Kaouther Ben Hania’s The Voice of Hind Rajab lands a Golden Globes nomination
Kaouther Ben Hania is once again at the center of the international film conversation after her latest feature, The Voice of Hind Rajab, received a Golden Globes nomination in the 2026 lineup announced on December 8, 2025. The film is nominated for Best Motion Picture Non English Language, officially listed as a Tunisian entry, a placement that instantly elevates its visibility at a moment when global audiences are paying renewed attention to cinema that confronts contemporary crises without softening their edges.

The nomination builds on the film’s major festival momentum earlier this year at the Venice Film Festival, where it won the Grand Jury Prize Silver Lion, one of the event’s top honors and a strong indicator of awards season strength. Reports from Venice described intense audience reaction and framed the prize as recognition of a work that is as formally controlled as it is emotionally overwhelming.
The Voice of Hind Rajab has been widely described as a docudrama rooted in the final hours of Hind Rajab, drawing its force from the communications and emergency response surrounding what happened. Rather than treating tragedy as distant spectacle, Ben Hania’s approach centers human presence and the unbearable intimacy of listening, using the architecture of sound and reconstruction to make the viewer experience time, fear, and helplessness as something immediate rather than historical. Coverage in recent days has emphasized how the film’s power comes from this closeness to recorded reality and the moral insistence embedded in its form.
The Golden Globes nomination is significant not only as another milestone in Ben Hania’s career, but also as a statement about Tunisian cinema’s growing prominence on major international platforms. The official nominations list places Tunisia alongside some of the most influential film industries in the world, signaling that films emerging from North Africa are not simply being discovered but are competing at the highest level on their own terms.
Beyond prestige, the nomination can materially change a film’s trajectory through wider distribution interest, expanded screenings, and a broader public conversation that reaches far beyond festival and critic circles. With the awards ceremony set for January 11, 2026.
