With monster trucks and Comic-Con, Saudis defy killjoy image

Some may consider it sinful, but the growing entertainment scene has a powerful backer — the second-in-line to the throne, Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

Visitors enter Saudi Comic Con, in the first event of its kind to be held in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia in February 2017. Saudi Arabia. AP Photo
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Monster trucks, hip-hop dancing and Game of Thrones all have one surprising thing in common now: Saudi Arabia.

The kingdom, which bans cinemas and other entertainment venues, is challenging its ultraconservative image and loosening the reins on fun by opening its doors to live shows, including some from abroad.

Clerics and many citizens still consider it sinful, but the growing entertainment scene has a powerful backer — the second-in-line to the throne. Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s support is key to this cultural push, which also means the fun is tightly controlled.

Still, it’s a notable shift from just a few years ago, when the religious police — known as the mutawa – would shoo women out of malls for wearing bright nail polish, insist restaurants turn off music and break up gatherings where unrelated men and women were mixing.

Last year, the mutawa were ordered to soften their approach and their powers were curtailed.

Though most Saudis voluntarily adhere to the country’s Islamic mores, there are plenty who are happy to embrace reforms — or what could also be seen as a return to the more relaxed era of the 1980s, when music concerts were performed.

The recent all-male concert of Saudi singer Mohammed Abdu was both nostalgic and groundbreaking. He had not performed in the Saudi capital, Riyadh, since the late 1980s.

History is also being made. The first ever Comic-Con event in Saudi Arabia drew thousands of spectators in February in Jeddah.

Fans dressed up as their favourite Marvel characters. Actors Julian Glover and Charles Dance — Grand Maester Pycelle and Tywin Lannister from HBO's Game of Thrones — made an appearance. Rock music blared in the halls. For most of the event, men and women were not segregated as is the case in schools, universities and restaurants.

In a female-only area at Comic-Con some women were able to dress up in colourful superhero costumes.

Moiz Muqri has been collecting comic books since the 1990s.

“An event like Comic-Con, I could not have imagined it happening in Saudi Arabia five years ago,” said the 37-year-old resident of Jeddah, who wore a Spider-Man hoodie to the event. “It is a seismic shift what has happened in the last two, three years.”

The event was a step too far for some. It drew backlash from tens of thousands of Saudis on Twitter, including the prominent imam of the Prophet Mohammed’s mosque in Medina.

Sheikh Hussein Al Sheikh denounced the event for its life-size statues and its glorification of mystical superheroes, seen as a form of idolatry. He said it was “shameful that there be such events sponsored by an official entity”, and called for a boycott.

Within weeks his Twitter account was deleted.

The official arm behind these events is the General Entertainment Authority, created last year as part of a wider effort by the deputy crown prince to diversify the oil-driven economy.

A major aim is to keep some of the Saudi tourism money spent abroad each year in the country. The National Committee for Tourism says Saudis spent US$35 billion (Dh129bn) abroad in 2015.

The Entertainment Authority wants to double what Saudi families currently spend on entertainment in the kingdom by 2030. Saudi Arabia is also in talks to open a Six Flags theme park.

Another aim is to appease the country’s majority youth, who — unlike older generations — have unrestricted access to the world through their smartphones.

One of the first shows to perform under this new banner was iLuminiate, a performance that fuses hip-hop dance with electrified glow-in-the-dark suits.

Several thousand men and women packed halls in Riyadh and Jeddah in October to watch the dancers perform to Michael Jackson, Bruno Mars and Missy Elliott hits.

Egyptian-American creator Miral Kotb, a software engineer and dancer, said she was approached to bring the show to Saudi Arabia by the company Live Entertainment with support from the government.

“They wanted something that would be family-friendly ... so people are dancing in the dark and it is a pretty, I guess, conservative show as far as the movements,” she said.

There were a few women on stage, but there was no way to know who was doing what because the dancers were dressed in special suits and performing in the dark. Ms Kotb said they took out hip movements and changed the costumes to look more conservative.

Crowds were loud and excited. “They were hungry for it,” she said.

There are still no plans for cinemas, but an evening with American movie star Al Pacino may take place in May, according to the Entertainment Authority’s website. Also scheduled for 2017 is a performance by Blue Man group, a comedy play, a poetry recital and drag racing.

Previously, Saudi Arabia hosted WWE wrestling matches for male-only crowds. This month, the all-American Monster Jam truck show roared in Riyadh. Tens of thousands showed up to watch the massive, four-metre-tall monster trucks fly across pits and dunes.

Female drivers, mechanics and spectators were not allowed.

“You respect their religion and their beliefs and they really didn’t seem to have a problem with us,” said Monster Jam driver Randy Brown, a native of North Carolina.

“It was unbelievable how excited they were to have us there,” he said. “It was an experience that I wouldn’t trade for anything.”

* Associated Press