Portal:African cinema/Selected film

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Mati Diop

Dahomey is a 2024 documentary film directed by French-Senegalese filmmaker, Mati Diop and winner of the 2024 Golden Bear Award, the highest prize awarded at the Berlin International Film Festival. It was also nominated for the Berlinale Documentary Film Award. An international co-production (France, Senegal and Benin) the film explores the return of 26 royal treasures of the Kingdom of Dahomey to present-day Benin. The artifacts were looted during French colonial rule and were previously on display in a Parisian museum before being repatriated.

The film uses a blend of fact and fiction to tell the story and emphasizes the symbolic value of the artifacts to the Kingdom of Dahomey. The film includes a discussion by students at the University of Abomey-Calavi, presenting their views on the repatriation of cultural assets. Some of the students criticize the Paris museum for returning only 26 of the 7,000 worldwide ethnographic objects it holds.

In her acceptance speech Diop said “To rebuild we must first restore, and to restitute we must do justice..We are among those who refuse to forget”.  The film is  scheduled for theatrical release in France on 25 September 2024..

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Mami Wata promotional poster

Mami Wata is a 2023 black-and-white fantasy thriller written and directed by C.J. “Fiery” Obasi. The film premiered at the 2023 Sundance Film Festival making it  Obasi’s third film to screen at Sundance and where its cinematographer Lílis Soares won the Special Jury Prize in the World Dramatic Competition. In an interview with CNN, Obasi stated he "wanted to make a hyper-stylised film" with its style rooted in substance, taking inspiration from his favourite filmmakers such as Akira Kurosawa and David Lynch. The characters Prisca and Zinwe were inspired by Obasi's late sisters.

The film was listed as the Nigerian entry for Best Feature Film at the 96th Academy Awards and its accolades include  nominations for Best International Film at the Independent Spirit Awards and Outstanding International Motion Picture at the NAACP Image Awards in addition to three wins at the 2023 FESPACO festival including for best cinematography and set design. Cast members include Evelyne Ily Juhen, Uzoamaka Aniunoh, Kelechi Udegbe and Emeka Amakeze. The film received praise for its cinematography, depth of narration and the infusion of folklore with socio-political commentary. It holds a perfect 100% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes.


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Abderrahmane Sissako

Black Tea is a 2024 romantic drama film co-written and directed by Mauritanian director, Abderrahmane Sissako.  an international co-production between France, Mauritania, Luxembourg, Taiwan and Ivory Coast, it tells the story of A young Ivorian girl named Aya who moves to China and falls in love with an older Chinese man named Cai. The film explores the challenges to their relationship due to their backgrounds and societal biases. The director was inspired to write this story after discovering a restaurant called "La Colline Parfumée" (The Perfumed Hill) run by an Afro-Chinese couple. It premiered at the 74th Berlin International Film Festival in February 2024, competing for the Golden Bear award.. It sparked discussions about love, identity, and cultural intersectionality.


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Cast and crew of Sira at Berlinale

Sira is a 2023 drama film written and directed by Burkinabé filmmaker and producer, Apolline Traoré. The film set in the Sahel tells the story of a young Fulani girl, Sira, travelling to meet her groom, Jean-Sidi. ttacked by Islamist terrorists, all the men are killed and Sira, rapedand left for dead i, t fights for her survival and   plots her revenge. Of how she hoped her film would move people, Traoré said “I want to say to my people that there is hope. And for the international audience, I want to share what the situation is like, to tell them about this war. It's my responsibility to narrate what is going on”

The film was a co-production between Burkina Faso, Senegal, France and Germany and shot in Mauritania It premiered at the 73rd Berlin International Film Festival, winning the Panorama Audience Award for Best Feature Film. It also screened at the 2023 edition of  Panafrican Film and Television Festival of Ouagadougou where it won the second prize.


Sira was selected as the Burkinabé entry in the Best International Feature Film for the 96th Academy Awards, the first Burkinabé entry since 1989. The film was praised for Nafissatou Cissé’s portrayal of Sira, Traoré’s direction, and its portrayal of resilience in the face of adversity.


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Andrew Lowe - Cofounder of Element Pictures

On Becoming a Guinea Fowl (2024) is a comedy drama film written and directed by Zambian filmmaker, Rungano Nyoni. The film won the Un Certain Regard section at the 77th Cannes Film Festival on 16 May 2024.i and developed by BBC Film and Element Pictures. It was financed by A24 alongside BBC Film and Fremantle. Rungano won the Un Certain Regard award at Cannes for Best Director. It tells the story of Shula who finds her uncle’s corpse on an empty road in the middle of the night. As funeral proceedings begin around them, she and her cousins bring to light the buried secrets of their middle-class Zambian family. The film currently has 100% rating based on 17 critics’ reviews on the review aggregator website, Rotten Tomatoes


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John Trengrove

The Wound (Xhosa: Inxeba Xhosa pronunciation: [íŋǁeːɓa]) is a 2017 South African drama film directed by John Trengove. It was screened in the World Cinema Dramatic Competition at the 2017 Sundance Film Festival and the Panorama section of the 67th Berlin International Film Festival. It was selected as the South African entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 90th Academy Awards, making the December shortlist. The story tracks a closeted relationship between two men in the context of the Xhosa initiation ritual of Ulwaluko. Inspiration for The Wound came after Trengove read A Man Who is Not a Man, a novel by Thando Mgqolozana on the topic of the Xhosa initiation ceremony. Trengove wished to challenge the notion that homosexuality was a product of western culture that posed a threat to traditional African culture. The Wound received 19 awards at 44 festivals worldwide; eight South African Film and Television Awards (SAFTA) nominations and won five including Best Feature Film, Best Actor in a Feature Film, Best Supporting Actor in a Feature Film, Best Achievement in Directing in a Feature Film, and Best Achievement in Editing in a Feature Film


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Baya Medhaffar
Leyla Bouzid

As I Open My Eyes (French: À peine j'ouvre les yeux) is a 2015 French-Tunisian drama film directed by Leyla Bouzid. The story revolves around Farah (Baya Medhaffer), a rebellious teenager who defies her mother's (Ghalia Benali) concerns by sneaking out to sing with an underground band. Set in the lead-up to Tunisia's Jasmine Revolution in the summer of 2010, the film captures Farah's as well as the country’s struggle for independence and self-expression.  

The film won multiple awards including at the Venice International Film Festival and was selected as the Tunisian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 89th Academy Awards. The film received positive reviews upon its release. It holds a 100% fresh ratings from Rotten Tomatoes and a 7.5 average rating. Variety called it an "impressive debut" and Medhaffer's acting "a stand-out lead performance". A critic for Indiewire gave the film a score of A− and called it "the Best Fictional Film Yet About the Arab Spring."


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Nabwana IGG

Who Killed Captain Alex? is a 2010 Ugandan action comedy film written, produced, and directed by Nabwana Isaac Geoffrey Godfrey (IGG), known as Uganda's Quentin Tarantino. The film was made byWakaliwood, an ultra-low-budget studio in Kampala, Uganda founded by Nabwana. The film has gained cult status since becoming a viral sensation as a no-budget action film, produced on a reported budget of under $200. A trailer for the film was uploaded to YouTube in January 2010 followed by the full movie in March 2015. The movie has been viewed over 9.6 million times.

Nabwana was inspired to create the film by his love of Hollywood action movies and martial arts films as well as his desire to change the perception that cinema is only for the well-off in Uganda.

The original version of the film was intended for local distribution in Kampala, with the dialogue recorded in the native language of Luganda. After the Luganda trailer for the film went viral on YouTube, Nabwana adapted the local video joker (VJ), a popular practice in Uganda cinema, for a Western audience and hired VJ Emmie to provide comedic commentary in English.

Read more.


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Amy Jephta, winner of the 2022 SAFT for Best Achievement in Directing, Feature Film, Barakat

The South African Film and Television Awards (sometimes referred to as the Golden Horns; often simply called the SAFTAs) is an annual South African awards ceremony hosted by the National Film and Video Foundation (NFVF), to honor creative excellence in the local film and television industry as assessed by the volunteer judges. The various category winners are awarded a statuette, officially called the Golden Horn, and a certificate. Only South African citizens are eligible for the awards, first presented in 2006.

The faces on the statuette are based on artifacts from throughout Africa, some dating back to 800 CE, and reference the Lydenburg Heads.The three figure heads are sculpted to look like cattle horns and are a reference to flames and, ultimately, the rising sun as an "emblem of brightness, splendour and the supreme principle of the nature".  Among the biggest winners of the 2023 Awards were the Netflix drama Silverton Siege, which was the most-awarded film taking home six awards, the Netflix comedy series, How to Ruin Christmas with five awards, and Gaia, a horror film, that won four out of its nine nominations.


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Inmates at the Tindaanzee witch camp, Ghana

I Am Not a Witch is a 2017 drama film written and directed by Welsh-Zambian director Rungano Nyoni in her feature debut film. It was screened in the Directors' Fortnight section at the 2017 Cannes Film Festival and won the BAFTA Award for Outstanding Debut by a British Writer, Director or Producer for Nyoni and producer Emily Morgan at the 71st British Academy Film Awards and was selected as the British entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 91st Academy Awards,

The story centers around Shula (Maggie Mulubwa), an 8-year-old girl who is deemed a witch and sent to a witch camp. Writer-director Nyoni was inspired by actual stories of witchcraft accusations in Zambia. In her research for the film, she traveled to Ghana and spent time in one of the world's oldest witch camps, observing their daily life and rituals.  "I actually stayed in a [witch camp]. They said I was the first foreigner to do that, which is quite amazing. I read loads of research on witch camps. I stayed there to see what it was like to just live there."

On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 96% based on 78 reviews, with an average rating of 7.50/10. On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 79 out of 100, based on 19 critics. The Guardian's film critic called I am not a Witch "comic, tragic – and captivatingly beautiful."


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Biyi Bandele

Elesin Oba, The King's Horseman is a 2022 Yoruba historical drama film directed by Biyi Bandele based on Wole Soyinka's Death and the King's Horseman, a stage play he wrote while in Cambridge, where he was a fellow at Churchill College during his political exile from Nigeria, and is based on a real incident that took place in Yorubaland during British Colonial rule. The screenplay was translated into Yorùbá and the film subsequently subtitled into English by Nigerian linguist Kola Tubosun, a decision described as "one of [the film's] more ticklish conceits" and “the only way to make the film immediately accessible to a global audience.” The film is a co-production between Netflix and Ebonylife TV Studio. The movie premiered at the 2022 Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) on 9 September 2022, the first Yoruba-language film to premiere at TIFF, and was released in Nigerian cinemas on 28 October 2022 followed by a Netflix release on 4 November.

It is Soyinka's first work to be made into a motion picture since the 1970s film Kongi's Harvest directed by Ossie Davies.

The film is set in the 1940s Oyo Town in southwestern Nigeria. The king has just died, and as tradition demands Elesin Oba, the King's horseman, must perform ritual suicide in order to join his deceased king in the afterlife so that the king may gain unhindered passage into the land of the gods, thus preventing calamity from befalling the community. Elesin Oba's sexual appetites cause him to shirk in his duty, which leads to a lethal confrontation with the British and with devastating consequences. When the horseman is unable to fulfill his final obligation to the king, his ghost wanders the earth, spelling calamity for the land and its people

The film stars Odunlade Adekola as the titular character, with Shaffy Bello, Brymo, Deyemi Okanlawon, Omowunmi Dada, Jide Kosoko, Langley Kirkwood, Joke Silva amongst others in supporting roles. Read More.

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Abebe Bikila at the 1960 Olympics in Rome

The Athlete (Amharic: እትሌቱ, Atletu) is a 2009 Ethiopian drama film about Abebe Bikila (1932-1973) the Ethiopian marathon runner and first African to win a gold medal.  In 1960, he participated in the Rome Olympic Games as a complete unknown and won the gold medal running barefoot. He became an overnight global sensation and four years later, repeated his feat at the Tokyo Olympic Games, becoming the first man to win the Olympic marathon twice in a row. In 1969 he was in a car accident that left him a quadriplegic, paralyzed from the neck down. He died four years later.

Ethiopian-born Rasselas Lakew starred as Bikila in the film, winning the Best Actor award at the 2011 Brooklyn Film Festival. He also co-wrote, co-produced, and co-directed the film which blends biopic, drama, and archival footage. Its awards include The Lions Award for Best Film in The Bright Future section of the Rotterdam Film Festival and in 2010, The Athlete became the first-ever Ethiopian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the Academy Awards.


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