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15TH ANNUAL NEW YORK AFRICAN FILM FESTIVAL
CINEMA & HISTORY: AFRICA & THE FUTURE
April 9th - April 15th; May 6, 13, 20, & 27; May 23rd - 26th
MANHATTAN & BROOKLYN
This year New York African Film Festival commemorates our 15th Anniversary, along with the 50th anniversary of the independence of Guinea accompanied by a selection of remarkable and inspiring cinema.
April 9th - April 15th; May 6, 13, 20, & 27; May 23rd - 26th
MANHATTAN * BROOKLYN
This Wednesday, April 9th at 7:30 pm!
Special Guest Director Charles Burnett
Presenting his latest work
Namibia: The Struggle for Liberation
**Also in attendance will be the film's editor Edwin Santiago**
The film tells the story of Sam Nujoma, South West Africa People's Organization (SWAPO) leader and Namibia's first President,
charting the trajectory of his political awakening and the movement for liberation in Namibia and Southern Africa.
A pre-screening reception with Charles Burnett
will be held at the
Frieda and Roy Furman Gallery at 6:00 p.m.
Other films screening (all films are subtitled in English):
Baa Baa Black Girl (U.S. Premiere)
Gül Büyükbeşe Muyan, Turkey, 2007, 47m. In Turkish.
Although all the countries in the Muslim world have abolished slavery, including Saudi Arabia in 1966, the social suffering and the discrimination suffered by the slaves' descendants continue to have an effect today. This film tells the history of the dark-skinned Mustafa Olpak, whose African grandfather was bought as a domestic slave by an Ottoman Turkish family and thus came to Istanbul as a result of the Kemalist revolution. While his grandfather may have then been legally a free man, he was still was unable to feed all his children, and so he gave up one of his daughters for adoption to an unknown family. Movingly Mustafa tells how his father rediscovered the sister who had once disappeared into adoption. In 2006, Mustafa Olpak organized the first meeting of Afro-Turks with similar histories. Winner of the UNESCO Jury award Breaking The Chains' Prize.
SCREENING WITH
Bushman's Secret (U.S. Premiere)
Rehad Desai, South Africa, 2006, 64m. In English, Ju|'hoan and Afrikaans.
When South African filmmaker Rehad Desai travels to the Kalahari to investigate global interest in ancient Bushmen knowledge, he meets Jan van der Westhuizen, a fascinating Khomani San traditional healer. Jan's struggle to live close to nature is hampered by centuries of colonial exploitation of the San Bushmen and of their land. Unable to survive as they once did hunting and gathering, the Khomani now live in a state of poverty that threatens to see the last of this community forever. One plant could make all the difference. Hoodia, a cactus used by Bushmen for centuries to suppress appetite, has caught the attention of a giant pharmaceutical company as a weight-loss option for westerners. It now stands to decide the fate of the Khomani San. Bushman's Secret features breathtaking footage of the Kalahari landscape, and exposes us to a world where modernity collides with ancient ways, at a time when each has, strangely, come to rely on the other.
Wed Apr 9: 1:30 p.m.
Independently Guinea (U.S. Premiere)
Archival footage, USSR, 1959, 40m. In Russian.
One year after independence, we catch a glimpse of life in Guinea. The revolution is still alive in the minds and hearts of the people!
SCREENING WITH
The President of Guinea in the USSR
Archival Footage, USSR, 1959, 20m. In Russian.
Communist leaders welcome Guinean President Sékou Ahmed Touré on his first visit to the USSR as the leader of an independent Guinea.
FOLLOWED BY
Hello Guinea
Archival footage, USSR, 1961, 20m. In Russian.
Leonard Brezhnev visits Guinea and is welcomed by Sekou Touré and the people of Guinea. Hello Guinea is a brief sojourn into the heart of newly independent Guinea only three years after decolonization.
Wed Apr 9: 3:45 p.m
Namibia: The Struggle for Liberation (New York Premiere)
Charles Burnett, Namibia, 2007, 161m. In Oshi Ovambo, Oshi Herero, Damara/nama, Afrikaans, German, Russian, Chinese and English.
Critically acclaimed director Charles Burnett's latest film follows the legend of Samuel Nujoma (Carl Lumbly), Namibia's first president and prominent leader in the struggle for independence from apartheid South Africa. The film opens when Nujoma is 16 years old, the country is under constant oppression from South Africa, and the young man learns that he is the direct descendant of royalty. He sets off as a young man to live with an aunt, and befriends a religious man (Danny Glover) who has maintained a low profile after legal troubles stemming from a staged car accident. Eventually Nujoma, in the face of severe racism, forms the SWAPO political movement that, with the assistance of some foreign governments, eventually earns Namibia its independence. Later on, a boycott and massacre of protestors turn up the heat, forcing Nujoma into exile.
Wed Apr 9: 7:30 p.m.
_______________________________________________________
Other Festival Highlights Include:
§ A panel discussion with internationally acclaimed Senegalese historian Dr. Mamadou Diouf on Monday, April 14 will offer audiences and filmmakers alike an opportunity to take up African history as a living dynamic that actively engages and informs tomorrow's cinema history.
§ Screening footage of the African continent - Films including Baa Baa Black Girl, which examines the indigenous Afro-Turk community, and the premiere episode of The African Slave Trades: Across the Indian Ocean featuring the slave routes and migration passages from Eastern Africa across the Indian Ocean.
§ Tribute to Ousmane Sembène - An intimate night of personal reminiscence, literary readings and a screening of Sembène's seminal film Borom Sarret at the French Institute Alliance Française on May 27 will pay tribute to Sembène, the venerable Father of African Cinema, whose guidance has influenced the African family of filmmakers.
§ African Liberation Movements - Films such as Namibia: The Struggle for Liberation, Cuba: An African Odyssey, and Brothers in Arms, all directly link liberation movements in Southern and Western Africa to the history of the African Diaspora, laying out paths of political awakening that are not yet commonly known.
§ Explore Current Events - Films such as Black Business and Bushman's Secret explore current events through a documentary technique that exposes the subjectivity of storytelling, while also providing possible examples for an "objective" documentary tradition.
§ "Storytelling Epics" - Isaac Julien's experimental film Fantôme Afrique, along with This is My Africa and Awaiting for Men, represent the epitome of the 2008 New York African Film Festival. Daring, crisp and lush, the films manifest visual metaphors for Africa.
§ Female Directors Emerge! - Films such as Shoot the Messenger by Ngozi Onwurah, Cuba: An African Odyssey by Jihan El Tahir, This is My Africa by Zina Saro-Wiwa, Black Business by Osvalde Lewat-Hallade, Awaiting for Men by Katy Lena Ndiaye and many more show the ascent of African female directors.
… And much, much MORE!....
FOR A COMPLETE LISTING OF FILMS, SCHEDULES & TO PURCHASE TICKETS FOR RECEPTIONS, VISIT:
www.africanfilmny.org
15ème NYAFF en 2008 au :
Lincoln Center
9 - 15 avril
Columbia University
14 avril
French Institute
Alliance Française
6, 13, 20, & 27 mai
BAMcinématek
23 - 26 mai
Russian State Archives - Focus on Guinea
As part of the 15th New York African Film Festival, AFF presents footage from the Russian State Archive documenting newly independent Guinea in 1959-1961.
Wednesday, April 9, 3:45pm
Sunday, April 13, 5:45pm Guest speaker
Walter Reade Theater at Lincoln Center
2007 marked Ghana's 50th independence anniversary and in 2010 17 African nations will celebrate their 50th anniversaries as well. As we come together in 2008 under the banner of Cinema and History: Africa and the Future for the 15th Anniversary New York African Film Festival, we explore film as a medium to connect tradition with the contemporary. In association with the Russian State Archives of Film and Photo Documents, NYAFF is proud to present three archival videos from post-independence Guinea, featuring President Ahmed Sékou Touré and other important figures from Guinea's liberation history.
Independently Guinea (U.S. Premiere), Archival footage, USSR, 1959, 40m. In Russian.
The President of Guinea in the USSR, Archival Footage, USSR, 1959, 20m. In Russian.
Hello Guinea, Archival footage, USSR, 1961, 20m. In Russian.
2008 AFRICAN FILM FESTIVAL PROGRAM
COMPLETE FILM LISTING
* Directors will be in attendance.
Directions, tickets, and venue info
WED 4/9
1:30 Baa Baa Black Girl with Bushman's Secret
3:45 Russian Archival Footage - Focus on Guinea
5:15 Ezra
*7:30 Namibia: The Struggle for Independence
THURS 4/10
1:15 Iron Ladies of Liberia
*5:45 Black Business
*7:45 Shoot the Messenger
10:00 Juju Factory
FRI 4/11
*5:45 Fantôme Afrique
with This Is My Africa
*7:30 Sierra Leone Independence with Africa Paradis
9:45 Meokgo & the Stickfighter with Bunny Chow
SAT 4/12
*1:15 Goodbye Mothers
*3:30 Meteni: The Lost One followed by Awaiting for Men
*5:30 The African Slave Trades: Across the Indian Ocean
*7:30 Brothers in Arms
*9:30 Shoot the Messenger
SUN 4/13
*1:30 The African Slave Trades: Across the Indian Ocean
*3:30 Baa Baa Black Girl with Bushman's Secret
*5:45 Russian Archival Footage
*7:45 Fantôme Afrique with This Is My Africa
*9:30 Cuba: An African Odyssey
TUES 4/15
*1:30 Meteni: The Lost One with Awaiting for Men
3:30 Black Business
5:30 Goodbye Mothers
*7:45 Sierra Leone Independence with Africa Paradis
*9:30 Brothers in Arms
Directions and venue info
MON 4/14
6:30 Panel Discussion: Cinema & History: Africa & the Future
Directions, tickets, and venue info
TUE 5/6
12:30 Buud Yam
4:00 Sarraounia
*7:00 Buud Yam
9:00 Sarraounia
TUES 5/13
12:30 Muna Moto
4:00 Ali Zaoua
*7:00 Muna Moto
9:00 Ali Zaoua
TUES 5/20
12:30 Baara
4:00 Drum
*7:00 Baara
9:00 Drum
TUES 5/27
*7:00 Homage to Ousmane Sembène
featuring DJ Spooky
Borom Sarret with
In Memory of Sembène
Directions, tickets, and venue info
FRI 5/23
6:50 African Shorts Program
featuring
Meokgo and the Stick Fighter, Menged, Mama Put
9:15 African Shorts Program
SAT 5/24
6:50 Les Saignantes
9:15 Les Saignantes
SUN 5/25
2:00 Juju Factory
4:30 Clouds Over Conakry
6:50 Juju Factory
9:15 Clouds Over Conakry
MON 5/26
6:50 A Love During the War
with Growing Stronger
9:15 A Love During the War
with Growing Stronger
* Directors will be in attendance.
Walter Reade Theater
165 West 65th St. (upper level)
btwn. Broadway and Amsterdam Ave.
Visit filmlinc.com or call 212.496.3809 for tickets. Box office: open daily from 12:30pm. Call 212.875.5600 for information. General Admission $11, $7 FSLC members, $7 students, $7 for seniors (weekday matinees), $7 children (ages 6-12) accompanied by adult.
Directions: 1 train to 66th Street. M5, M66 or M106 bus. B, D, A, C train to 59th Street. M10, M20.
Columbia University
Lifetime Screening Room, 511 Dodge Hall at 116th St. & Broadway
Free and open to the public. Website: www.columbia.edu
Directions: 1 train to 116th St.
French Institute Alliance Française
Florence Gould Hall, 55 East 59th Street
Visit www.fiaf.org or Ticketmaster at 212-307-4100 for tickets. Tickets for Cinèma Tuesdays screenigns are free for FIAF Members, $10 for non-members and $7 for students with a valid photo ID. For more information, call the box office at 212-355-6160.
Directions: N,R or W to 59th Street or the 4,5 or 6 to 59th Street.
BAMcinématek
30 Lafayette Avenue Brooklyn
Visit www.BAM.org or call 718.636.4100 for information. Tickets also available through www.movietickets.com or 718.777.FILM. General Admission $10, Cinema Club Members $6, Seniors, Children under 12, Students with valid ID (Mon-Thu, except holidays) $7.
Directions: C train to Lafayette; N, R, D, M to Pacific; 2, 3, 4, 5 train to Nevins; or G train to Fulton St.
Contact
African Film Festival, Inc.
154 West 18th Street
Suite 2A
NY NY 10011
Tél: +1. 212. 352. 1720
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