Karim Aïnouz (born 17 January 1966) is a Brazilian film director, writer, and visual artist.
Aïnouz was born to a Brazilian mother and an Algerian father, in Fortaleza, Ceará, in the Brazilian Northeast.
Aïnouz’s feature debut, Madame Satã, premiered at the Un Certain Regard section of the 2002 Cannes Film Fest.
His following films, Suely in the Sky, and I Travel Because I Have to, I Come Back Because I Love You, co-directed with Marcelo Gomes, premiered at the Orizzonti of the in 2006 and 2009 Venice Film Festival.
In 2011, The Silver Cliff was presented in the Directors’ Fortnight and won Best Director at the Rio de Janeiro Film Festival.
In television, Aïnouz created and directed Alice, a 13 episode fiction series for HBO Brasil.
His short films and installations have been shown at the Whitney Museum of American Art, the São Paulo Biennial, the Sharjah Biennial and Videobrasil.
As creative advisor and lecturer, Aïnouz has been invited to Screenwriters Labs, such as Princeton University, Wexner Center for the Arts, MIT, EICTV among others.
Karim Aïnouz has been developing, with fellow filmmakers Marcelo Gomes and Sérgio Machado, The Center for Audiovisual Narratives in partnership with State authorities of Ceará, Brazil. They coordinate and work as creative advisors to the Screenwriters Lab, a one-year program committed to the development of new generation of filmmakers, providing support throughout their projects.
My Oscar Book:
Since 2017, Aïnouz is a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and thus votes for the Oscars.
Karim Aïnouz documentary Zentralflughafen THF, premiered at the 68th Berlinale – Panorama, won the Amnesty International Film Award, and has been screened in many festivals.
His previous feature Futuro Beach, had its world premiere at the 64th Berlinale Competition.
In 2019, he released The Invisible Life of Eurídice Gusmão, an adaptation of the brazilian novel A Vida Invisivel de Eurídice Gusmão, written by Martha Batalha.
The film depicted the struggle of two sisters against repression and bigotry in the 1950s in Rio de Janeiro. It was screened at the Un Certain Regard section of the 2019 Cannes Film Fest, where it won the section top prize.
In 2021, Aïnouz third documentary, Mariner of the Mountains, followed his search for his own Algerian roots in Algiers, his father’s homeland.
In 2023, Aïnouz released his English language debut film, Firebrand, at the main competition of the 2023 Cannes Film Fest. The film follows the final years of Henry VIII reign and his wife Catherine Parr.
In 2024, Aïnouz went back to the Brazilian Northeast with the erotic thriller Motel Destino, the film had its world premiere at the 2024 Cannes Film Festival competition.






