Planet Africa program
September 8 – 18, 2000
The dawn of the 21st century, a new millennium, TIFF celebrates 25years and the Planet Africa at the half way point showcase of its 5th year program.
September 8 – 18, 2000
diaspora. High-octane action thrillers, quiet verité visions, and sensuous big-screen epics; tales of pain, humor, passions, violence and love; highly anticipated new work from celebrated filmmakers and sparking first-time visions
The beauty of Planet Africa is that it celebrates the diversity of artistic expressions that constitutes a cinematic diaspora. High-octane action thrillers, quiet verité visions, and sensuous big-screen epics; tales of pain, humor, passions, violence and love; highly anticipated new work from celebrated filmmakers and sparking first-time visions from new talent/ if there is a unifying phase that links the films and filmmakers of Planet Africa this year, it is the pursuit of truth. This year’s programme promises to inspire debate with its tantalizingly controversial aesthetic and thematic selections.
Opening Planet Africa this year is the fast-paced satire of a crime thriller, Hijack Stories, from director Oliver Schmitz. Based on the classic Mapantsulastory, this film centres on the real and imagined lives of contemporary gangsters in Soweto.
One of the diaspora’s most powerful filmmakers, Raoul Peck, presents his much-awaited political thriller, Lumumba, a dramatic portrayal of the political life and death of Patrice Lumumba, one of Africa’s most strident exponents of anti-colonialism. Lumumbais one of this year’s special presentations.
The coming-of-age story is handled very differently in Moroccan Nabil Ayouch’s beautifully touching epic, Ali Zaoua, and in first-time French filmmaker Fabrice Genestal’s gritty but stylish ghetto drama, La Squale. Nevertheless, both films deal with the effects of poverty on the young, marry innocence with the realities of violence, and champion the transcendent power of friendship.
Guy Deslauriers’ Passage du milleuand Roger Gnoan M’Bala’s Adanggaman excavate the silence around Africa’s history, scrutinizing on of the history’s biggest taboos, transatlantic slavery. Deslauriers’ impressionistic film captures resonant images, which replace a thousand words. In the deeply controversial Adanggaman, which explores the compliance of African chiefs in the slave trade, M’bala directs the camera like a painter uses canvas and the result is a beautiful and sensitive film depicting a horrifying reality.
Journeys, whether made of out economic necessity, by force, or in the pursuance of dreams, characterize the diaspora reality and the epic myth. Three films in this year’s programme focus on the journeying hero. In Bye Bye Africa, director Mahamet-Saleh-Haroun creates a kooky travelogue of his return voyage home. Yousry Nasrallah, one of Eygpt’s freshest voices, depicts an ambitious man’s symbolic journey from Cairo to Paris in El Medina (La Ville). Jean-Marie Teno returns to the Festival this year with Vacances au pays, demonstrating his signature critical look at his native Cameroon, simultaneously sharing personal reflections.
The satirical comedy is a genre that African filmmakers have championed, and here, Cheick Oumar Sissoko adds his particular epic flavour to the genre in Battu. Marking a new departure for African films aspiring to reach the global marketplace, the film stars Hollywood actor Danny Glover and West African Isaach de Bankole.
The US independent contribution to Planet Africa this year is Carl Seaton’s One Week, which displays touches of genius and an assured cinematic visions in its depiction of a mid-western family dealing with the threat of AIDS.
A remarkable new meditation on the politics and experiences of Tunisian women, La Saison des Hommes recounts the tale of a newlywed woman who longs to break with tradition.
Spanning these genres, and united in their thematic discourse on love, are this year’s contributions from our short film directors. Contemplative, witty, tragic and playful, these distinct films – from Alian Gomis, Munga Tunda Djo, Aaron Woolfolk, Alrick Riley, Mehdi Ben Attia and Zina Modiano, Charles Hall and Dumisani Phakathi – showcase tomorrow’s feature talents from around the world.
Planet Africa is - as always – a potent mixture of powerful, the personal and the fantastical. The tapestry this year is very rich.
Gaylene Gould and June Givanni
Planet Africa, program introduction
25th Annual Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF)
___________________________
TIFF: PA PROGRAMMING TEAM
Gaylene Gould, Planet Africa Programmer
Orla La-Wayne Garriques, Planet Africa Program Assistant
FILMS & FILMMAKERS
-
Adanggaman by Roger Gnoan M'Bala
-
Ali Zaoua by Nabil Ayouch
-
Are You Cinderella? by Charles Hall
-
Auguy by Munga Tunda Djo
-
Bàttu by Cheick Oumar Sissoko
-
Bye Bye Africa by Mahamat Saleh Haroun
-
Christmas With Granny by Dumisani Phakathi
-
The Elevator by Alrick Riley
-
En Face by Zina Modiano and Mehdi Ben Attia
-
Hijack Stories by Oliver Schmitz
-
El Medina by Yousry Nasrallah
-
One Week by Carl Seaton
-
Passage du milieu by Guy Deslauriers
-
La saison des hommes by Moufida Tlatli
-
La Squale by Fabrice Genestal
-
Lumumba by Raoul Peck
-
The Station by Aaron Woolfolk
-
Tourbillons by Alain Gomis
-
Vacances Au Pays by Jean-Marie Teno
CONTRIBUTORS
Black Film & Video Network (BFVN), Grecia Mayers