The Study of Racialism Forum Index
The Study of Racialism
Discussion of U.S. Racialism
Please read The Rules before posting.
 
 FAQFAQ   SearchSearch     RegisterRegister 
   Log inLog in 
'

African Film

 
Post new topic   Reply to topic    The Study of Racialism Forum Index -> International Stories
Author Message
Dragon Horse
Superuser
Superuser


Joined: 07 Feb 2007
{Posts: 1301 }
Location: Lookin DC Metro, Feelin Geneva

PostPosted: Tue 06 Mar 2007 14:28    Post subject: African Film Reply with quote

We often talk about how black people are portrayed in Western movies, largely by white audiences...what about what Africans are doing to portray themselves?


African films

The Ouagadougou Oscars
Mar 1st 2007 | OUAGADOUGOU
From The Economist print edition

Africa's answer to Hollywood


AFRICA is suddenly big in Tinseltown. Forest Whittaker has just won an Oscar for his portrayal of the Ugandan dictator, Idi Amin, in “The Last King of Scotland”. “Blood Diamond”, a film about the precious stones that fuelled a civil war in Sierra Leone, picked up several nominations. Meanwhile Africa's own film festival, Fespaco, got under way this week in Burkina Faso, in west Africa. Though Ouagadougou, the capital, is richer in dust than glitz, it put on a flamboyant opening ceremony that featured displays of horsemanship and mime. Hundreds of films made by Africans and people of African descent competed for the Yennenga Stallion, a golden statue of a prancing horse and the nearest thing Africa has to an Oscar.

AFP

And the Stallion goes to...African cinema needs a showcase. Few films are widely distributed, and Fespaco is a chance to win bigger audiences not only among the film buffs of Ouagadougou but also through the distributors and television firms that attend. Fespaco also lets African directors promote a vision of Africa that contrasts with its portrayal by Hollywood. “Hollywood has not been fair to Africa,” says a Nigerian director, Mahmoud Ali Balogun. Most American films set in Africa, he says, accentuate the negative. “I want Hollywood to talk about the beautiful things in Africa, and to use our way of telling the story,” says Moussa Sene Absa, a Senegalese director.

Money can be hard to raise. Mr Sene Absa has been trying for ten years to make a film about his compatriot, Battling Siki, the first African-born world light-heavyweight boxing champion. No one is interested in this uplifting story, he says. But in Ouagadougou he did screen his film “Teranga Blues”, about a young illegal immigrant expelled from Europe and forced, back home in Senegal, to live up to the tall stories he told about having made it big in the West.

Relations with the West are a recurring theme. “Africa Paradis”, by Benin's Sylvestre Amoussou, is set in a future in which Africa has become a paradise and Westerners are desperate to immigrate. Abderamane Sissako's “Bamako” has Africa as a plaintiff in a court in which the World Bank and IMF are being tried.

One boost for African film is the advent of digital technology, which is far cheaper than filming in 35mm. A Moroccan project makes 30 films a year, spending no more than 12 days on each one. The results are impressive: one such film, “La Vague Blanche” by Ali El Majboud, was in the running for the Stallion.
Back to top
G-Man
Moderator
Moderator


Joined: 27 Nov 2004
{Posts: 2652 }

PostPosted: Tue 06 Mar 2007 17:26    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
Ouagadougou


I love how this rollls of my tongue.
Back to top
Display posts from previous:   
Post new topic   Reply to topic    The Study of Racialism Forum Index -> International Stories All times are GMT
Page 1 of 1

 


Powered by phpBB © 2001, 2005 phpBB Group