Portal:African cinema/Selected biography/29

Apolline Traoré in 2017

Apolline Traoré (born in May 1976) is a Burkinabe film director.  Her film career started in the 2000s in the United States, where she attended college, directing several short films including Kounandi (2003), which was selected for the 2004 Toronto International Film Festival.

Her first feature film, Sous la clarté de la lune (2004), was co-written with and produced by Idrissa Ouédraogo, one of the Burkina Faso's best-known directors. In the late 2010s, she gained wider acclaim with Moi Zaphira (2013) and Frontières (2018), which follows four women from different regions who develop friendships during a bus journey across West Africa, The film was awarded two prizes at 2017 Fespaco, Africa’s largest film festival.

Her 4th feature Desrances (2019), set during the 2010-11 Ivorian crisis following the 2010 Ivory Coast elections, received many African and international awards including Fespaco’s award for Best Set Design.

Her most recent film Sira (2023), about a young Fulani woman who fights against Islamist terrorists after a deadly attack on her caravan in the Sahel, is Traoré's most lauded film to date.  It had its world premiere at the 73rd Berlin International Film Festival where it won the Panorama Audience Award for Best Feature Film and was selected as the Burkinabé entry in the Best International Feature Film category for the 96th Academy Awards—the first time Burkina Faso submitted a film since 1989.