(Fulu Mugovhani &
OC Ukeje in a scene from “Ayanda”)
This July sees the Durban International Film Festival (DIFF)
return for its 36th year of cinematic celebration. From July 16 to 26, the city
will be illuminated by the wonder and diversity of global cinema, with over 200
screenings in nine venues across the city. Alongside this selection of the best
of contemporary cinema, including 74 feature films, 50 documentaries, 74 short
films and 23 surf films, the festival offers an extensive workshop and seminar
programme in which industry experts from around the world share their knowledge
and skills.
This year's diverse line-up includes an expanded focus on
African cinema with a selection of Africa’s Lost Classics and a showcase of
this year’s FESPACO winners. Other focus areas include a cross-section of
contemporary cinema from Brazil and an investigation into the filmmaking
landscape of a changing Tunisia, as well DIFF Beat, which celebrates a number of
music-based films, and Just One Earth,
which presents a selection of environmentally- and sustainability themed
titles. In addition to the generous selection of feature films and cutting edge
documentaries, DIFF 2015 will screen 10 packages of short films and a selection
of thrilling surf films in the Wavescape Surf Film Festival.
While DIFF is a vital showcase for the ever-expanding
African film industry, South African film remains the festival’s key focus,
with 14 feature and 13 documentary films and 30 short films - most of them receiving their world premieres
on Durban screens.
This year’s opening night film sees the African premiere of Ayanda, the second fiction feature film
from South African filmmaker Sara Blecher who opened the festival in 2011 with Otelo Burning. Ayanda tells the story of
single-minded 21-year-old Afro-hipster Ayanda (Fulu Mugovhani) who has a talent
for taking neglected pieces of furniture and bringing them back to life. Eight
years after her father’s death, his prized auto repair garage is in financial
trouble and in danger of being sold, but Ayanda does everything in her power to
hold onto his legacy.
Then there’s Breathe
Umphefumlo, the Isango Ensemble’s contemporary adaptation of Puccini’s La Bohème, the low-budget horror The Actor from Aiden Whytock, the
politically inclined Bonnie-and-Clyde tale Impunity
from Jyoti Mistry and the long awaited Necktie
Youth from Sibs Shongwe-Le Mer.
Other South African fiction feature films include Dis Ek, Anna, based on the famous
Afrikaans novel and directed by Sara Blecher, and the dramatic thriller Lady Grey from Alain Chouquart.
South African
documentaries include Blood Lions,
which follows a South African conservationist and an American hunter on their
journey through the lion hunting industry, Coming
of Age, which follows the lives of two teenagers in Lesotho, Glory Game - The Joost van der Westhuizen
Story, which chronicles the famous rugby player’s battle with Motor Neuron
Disease, and The Shore Break which
documents the attempts by a foreign mining company to mine titanium in the
Eastern Cape.
The rich
programme of films from elsewhere on the continent includes a number of strong
directorial talents. From South Africa’s Mpumelelo Mcata comes the challenging
documentary-hybrid Black President. Philippe
Lacôte’s Run is a left-field
masterpiece from Cote d’Ivoire and Uganda delivers the goods with The Boda
Boda Thieves, the latest title from vivacious creative co-operative Yes!
That’s Us.
African documentaries include the powerful Beats of the Antonov which portrays the
musical lives of a war-torn community in Sudan, the remarkable Sembene! which documents the life and
career of African master Ousmane Sembene and Paths to Freedom, which explores the genesis of Namibia's armed
struggle against South Africa.
Africa’s Lost Classics is a selection providing a rare
opportunity for viewers to catch some of the most powerful and idiosyncratic
works from the continent’s rich film history. The selection comprises the
previously lost masterpiece Come Back,
Africa, the seminal Mapantsula
from Oliver Schmitz and The Blue Eyes of
Yonta by pioneering Guinea-Bissau filmmaker Flora Gomes, as well as Badou Boy and Touki Bouki, both from African master Djibril Diop Mambety.
In a special tribute to African cinema, DIFF 2015 features
six winners from the 2015 edition of the Pan-African Film and Television
Festival of Ouagadougou, or FESPACO. These include amongst others Fevers, which tells the story of
Benjamin, who moves in with his father and grandparents in a Paris suburb in
order to avoid foster-care. Sakou Traor’s feature debut film The Eye of the Cyclone, a psychological
drama about a young lawyer who has been appointed a case that no-one else
wants, and Rehad Desai’s Miners Shot Down
which returns to DIFF after being celebrated at FESPACO this year.
Following its rich tradition of world cinema, DIFF 2015
presents a diverse showcase of films from around the world. 1000 Rupee Note from India tells the
story of a poor old widow named Budhi who receives a gift of several 1000 Rupee
notes from a politician. A Girl Walks
Home Alone at Night bills itself as the first Iranian Vampire Western,
while Dealer, from France, documents
24 hours in the increasingly hellish life of a small time drug dealer. Bob And The Trees tells the story of
Bob, a 50-year-old logger in rural Massachusetts with a soft spot for golf and
gangster rap. Jean-Jacques Annaud’s visually
spectacular film Wolf Totem from
France and China, Roger Allers’s animation of Kahlil Gibran’s The Prophet, Gregg Araki’s dramatic
thriller White Bird in a Blizzard, Kim
Farrant’s uneasy drama Strangerland set
in Australia, and Chinese director Zhang Yimou’s drama romance, Coming Home contribute to the richly
textured programme this year.
This year’s
festival will once more play host to a sterling selection of documentaries from
around the world. The American Film (Dis)Honesty
- The Truth About Lies explores the complex impact dishonesty has on our
lives and our societies. Cartoonists:
Foot Soldiers of Democracy, from France, tells the story of 12 cartoonists
and their fight for equality, accountability and transparency. Democrats, from Denmark, tells the
unique story of the political elite in Zimbabwe fighting the battle over the
principles defining the country's possible future. Foodies, from Sweden, follows five of the world's most renowned
foodies on their hunt for the most exclusive nourishment in the world, while Taxi, from banned Iranian filmmaker
Jafar Panahi, takes us on a vibrant and colourful journey through the streets
of Tehran. This year will also screen Joshua Oppenheimer’s highly acclaimed
follow-up to his Academy Award Nominated documentary The Act of Killing, his second film The Look of Silence sees a family that survives
the genocide in Indonesia confronts the men who killed one of their brothers.
Like South
Africa, Brazil is a country defined by glaring inequality and cultural
polarity. It also has a rich culture of cinema and a remarkably diverse
national canon. Offering a window on to this complex and diverse country,
Brazilian Vision presents a wide range of films from different regions in
Brazil, providing an incisive overview of its considerable cinematic output.
From the north-east state of Pernambuco comes two celebrated feature films: The History of Eternity by Camilo
Cavalcanti and the moving Brazilian Dream,
an opera movie depicting the Brazilian economic crisis. From the capital Brasilia
comes White Out, Black In, which
portrays a country longing for transformation, while The Ballad of Poor Jean deals with the huge social divide between
rich and poor in the country.
The explosion of free speech that followed the Tunisian
revolution in January 2011 gave birth to new cinematographic voices as young
filmmakers armed themselves with cameras to express their points of view on a
newly emerging society. The selection which are all in Arabic with English
subtitles, includes amongst others NÃjib Belkadhi Bastard (Bastardo), Kaouther Ben Hania’s Challet
Of Tunis (Le Challet De Tunis), Raja Amari’s Tunisian Spring (Printemps Tunisien), Hamza Ouni’s El Gort and Mohamed Challouf’s Tahar Cheriaa Under the Shadow of the Baobab
which documents the undisputed father of Pan-Africanism and founder of film
Carthage Film Festival, the first film festival in Africa who deployed all his
energy to create the first authentic images of post-colonial Africa enabling
African cinema to contribute to the modernization of the continent.
DIFF, with the support of the French Institute of South
Africa and Urucu Media, presents a travelling programme of La Semaine de la
Critique (Critics’ Week) of Cannes Film Festival which will launch in Durban
before travelling to Cape Town and Johannesburg. Featured films include amongst
others Hope, Boris Lojkine’s takes on migration from Africa to Europe, You and the Night, an
erotic-existential-queer comedy from Yann Gonzalez. As well as these
screenings, La Semaine de la Critique in South Africa features a master class
with visiting filmmaker Boris Lojkine in Durban and filmmaker round tables in
Cape Town and Johannesburg.
With DIFF Beat, the festival pays tribute to musical freethinkers
and rule-breakers. Filmmaker Adam Sjaberg and rap superstar Nasir-Nas Jones
explore breakdancing and hip-hop in unlikely places in the film Shake the Dust. Tango Negro: The African Roots of Tango intersperses dance and musical performances with interviews
with tango-lovers and experts, while Kurt
Cobain: Montage of Heck blends Cobain’s personal archive with touching
interviews with his family. Imagine
Waking up Tomorrow and All Music Has Disappeared comes from cult
musician/art terrorist Bill Drummond, and When
Voices Meet tells the story of therapist Sharon Katz and singer/educator
Nonhlanhla Wanda’s 500-voice multiracial choir.
Just One Earth offers a selection of films that promote
sustainable living and raise awareness about the ecological threats we are
facing. All the Time in the World
tells the story of Canadian filmmaker Suzanne Crocker and her family who decide
to take time out from their lives and relocate to the wilds. In Energised filmmaker Hubert Canaval explores
how profit-driven efforts ensure that both alternative energy solutions and the
threats to our existence posed by today’s main sources of energy remain largely
unknown to the public. In Just Eat It: A
Food Waste Story, filmmaker Grant Baldwin and producer/writer Jen
Rustemeyer explore why nearly 50% of the food produced in Canada ends up in the
trash. Finally, the extraordinary Virunga
tells of a group of park-rangers in the Democratic Republic of Congo who have
devoted their lives to saving the gorillas in Virunga National Park.
The 10th Wavescape Surf Festival at DIFF celebrates a decade
of films and events around ocean sustainability and beach culture. From July 19
to 25, Wavescape will showcase the latest surf films from around the world. In
keeping with tradition, the Wavescape premiere will take place under the stars
at the Bay of Plenty lawns on July 19, followed by screenings at Ster Kinekor
Musgrave until July 25.
The 8th Talents Durban will bring together 40 selected
filmmakers from 10 different countries in Africa, chosen from over 200
submissions, who will take part in a series of masterclasses, workshops and
industry networking opportunities during the festival. Supported by the
KwaZulu-Natal Film Commission, Goethe Institute SA, German Embassy in South
Africa and Gauteng Film Commission, Talents Durban is presented in co-operation
with Berlinale Talents. Talents Durban is a platform for African filmmakers to
enhance their skills, develop collaborations and interface with the film
industry in Africa and beyond.
Now in its 6th year, the Durban FilmMart, a partnership
project with the Durban Film Office and the Durban International Film Festival,
is a film finance and co-production market presented in three strands - Finance
Forum, Master Classes and the Africa in Focus seminars. 19 selected African
projects (10 fiction features and 9 documentaries) will have an opportunity to
hold one-on-one meetings with potential financiers, co-producers, and
distributors in the Finance Forum. Projects will also have an opportunity to
pitch to a panel of international commissioning editors and financiers in the
African Pitch, a pitching forum of the DFM. See www.durbanfilmmart.com for further
details.
DIFF 2015’s principal screening venues are Suncoast
CineCentre, Ster Kinekor Musgrave, Cinema Nouveau Gateway, Elizabeth Sneddon
Theatre, Ekhaya Multi-Arts Centre in KwaMashu and the Tsogo Sun Elangeni Hotel.
Other venues include the Bay of Plenty Lawns, the KZNSA Gallery, the Denis
Hurley Centre, Sizakala Centre in Clermont, the Durban Music School and the
Luthuli Museum on the North Coast. The festival hub is once more housed at the
Tsogo Sun Elangeni Hotel.
Tickets should be acquired through the respective venues.
Prices range from R20 to R40, except at Luthuli Museum, Ekhaya, Elangeni Hotel,
the Denis Hurley Centre, Sizakala Centre in Clermont, the Durban Music School
and Bay of Plenty lawns, which are free of charge.
Programme booklets with the full screening schedule and
synopses of all the films are available free at screening venues and other
public information outlets. Full festival details can also be found on www.durbanfilmfest.co.za or by
calling 031 260 2506 or 031 260 1816.
The 36th Durban International Film
Festival is organised by the Centre for Creative Arts at the University of
KwaZulu-Natal (a special project of the Deputy Vice Chancellor of Humanities,
Cheryl Potgieter) with support from the National Film and Video Foundation,
KwaZulu-Natal Department of Economic Development & Tourism, KwaZulu-Natal
Film Commission, City of Durban, German Embassy, Goethe Institut, Industrial
Development Corporation, KwaZulu-Natal Department of Arts and Culture and a
range of other valued partners.