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Showing posts with label International Images Film Festival For Women (IIFF). Show all posts
Showing posts with label International Images Film Festival For Women (IIFF). Show all posts

20 August 2025

The International Images Film Festival (Harare) 22nd Edition 2025 Catalogue : Greetings from Molleen Chisveto, IIFF Acting Director


The International Images Film Festival (Harare)
22nd Edition 2025 Catalogue
and Greetings from Molleen Chisveto, IIFF Acting Director

See link to Catalogue below.

The International Images Film Festival for Women is back again for its 22nd edition, running from 22 to 26 August. We are excited to bring you a line up of women centred films with the theme ‘Women Make The World A Better Place’. The theme draws attention to how women remain resolute in their pursuit of a better world for themselves and their communities by being brave and courageous, by claiming their rightful places in economic activities, by demanding justice, and by taking leadership in order to challenge a repressive patriarchal world that has brought horrors like planet-destroying climate change and a resurgence of racism and gender discrimination into our world. In these times, creative and cultural industries are chronically underfunded. Producing the 2025 edition of IIFF has been no mean feat. I'm grateful to all the filmmakers whose work we screen over the next few days. I invite everyone to enjoy our programme of fifteen films that range from short fiction, to long and short documentaries and long fiction, all carefully selected from around the world. Two industry masterclasses complement the screenings. A documentary production masterclass takes place on Saturday 23 August, and a film business masterclass takes place on Sunday 24 August. Details are in this programme.

IIFF is thankful to be in a position to continue its contribution to realising SDG 5: End all forms of discrimination against all women and girls everywhere for yet another year. Telling stories of violence and harmful practices against women and girls and making such actions public works towards SDGs 5.1 and 5.2. Leadership only comes with public presence. IIFF, a woman founded, led and run organisation puts women firmly in the public space. This contributes to SDG 5.4 and encourages other young women to occupy public spaces. The creative industry is now a growing economic sector globally. IIFF is a platform for training and solidarity for women in the film industry, which also includes the use of technology in women's empowerment, as set out in SDG 5.B. This year special thanks go to the Embassy of the Republic of Ireland for supporting the Documentary Production Masterclass and the festival, the Embassy of Switzerland for hosting the opening film and reception, the Spanish Embassy for sponsoring the Business of Film masterclass, for allowing us to use their venue, Japanese Embassy for providing us with a film from their catalogue, and the Alliance Francaise for sponsoring us with their venue. We are delighted to welcome Elixir on board as a corporate partner.


Follow link to Catalogue : https://oqg-primary-prod-content.s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/uploads/pdf/1755182423037_niPb3z.pdf 

23 November 2022

International Images Film Festival for Women (IIFF) - Women at Crossroads 24 - 27 November 2022

International Images Film Festival for Women (IIFF)
Women at Crossroads
24 - 27 November 2022


Founded in 2002, IIFF is an annual festival held in Harare that is an exhibition platform for films that portray a woman in at least one major role, thus providing role modelling for African women to observe other women in film being active, displaying agency and impacting positively on their own lives and communities. The festival is hosted each year by the Institute of Creative Arts for Progress in Africa (ICAPA) Trust.

ANNOUNCEMENT
ICAPA Trust's African Women Filmmaker's Hub is excited to announce the 19th edition of the International Images Film Festival for Women (IIFF). For this event, IIFF has partnered with the German women's film festival, IFFF, held annually in Dortmund and Cologne. IFFF is interested to cultivate contacts on the African continent and to activate these contacts through concrete projects. IIFF in Zimbabwe and IFFF in Germany recognize the many artistic, content-related, and political intersections between the two festivals.





13 September 2022

International Images Film Festival (IIFF) 2022 presents "Women at Crossroads" in partnership with Internationales Frauen Film Fest Dortmund+Cologne (IFFF)

International Images Film Festival (IIFF) 2022 presents "Women at Crossroads" in partnership with Internationales Frauen Film Fest Dortmund+Cologne (IFFF)

IFFF - IIFF Partnership PRESS RELEASE
2022 12 Sept
Source: http://icapatrust.org/news/ifff-iiff-partnership-press-release/

ICAPA Trust's African Women Filmmaker's Hub is excited to announce the 19th edition of the International Images Film Festival for Women (IIFF). For this event, IIFF has partnered with the German women's film festival, IFFF, held annually in Dortmund and Cologne. IFFF is interested to cultivate contacts on the African continent and to activate these contacts through concrete projects. IIFF in Zimbabwe and IFFF in Germany recognize the many artistic, content-related, and political intersections between the two festivals.

Founded in 2002, IIFF is an annual festival held in Harare that exhibits films that portray a woman in at least one major role, thus providing the opportunity for African women to observe female characters being active, displaying agency, and impacting positively on their own lives and communities. The festival is hosted each year by the Institute of Creative Arts for Progress in Africa (ICAPA) Trust.

IFFF was founded in the 1980s and is one of the largest and most important women's film festivals worldwide. It aims to showcase the work of women directors in their richness of narrative styles as well as aesthetic and political attitudes. Alternating annually between Cologne and Dortmund, it presents a program of 100 films from 30 countries, with an average of 65 events at up to 7 venues.

IIFF 2022's theme "Women at Crossroads" exhibits films that examine the difficult decisions that women must make in the modern world and how they might do it in the most effective way for both themselves and society, especially in a post-Covid era marked by growing patriarchal authoritarianism in many parts of the world.

ICAPA director, Tsitsi Dangaremmbga said IIFF, is eager to use the occasion to increase public awareness of these challenges. Regarding this new media collaboration, she stated:
" IIFF is intentional about providing a platform for African women to tell their stories. This is crucial because they are faced with difficult choices and it's important to talk about these issues and. bring that into the public consciousness. That’s why we are excited to work with partners like IFFF who share in this vision and will help us bring our message and our festival to audiences across Africa and the world.”
Dr. Maxa Zoller, Director of the Internationales Frauen Film Fest Dortmund and Cologne said:
“Solidarity between women globally is more important than ever! I am thrilled to be collaborating with this wonderful festival, which - like ours - is especially concerned with providing role models for girls and women on and off the screen."
For more information contact Icapa Trust at awfh@icapatrust.org or call +263 77 4717 190 and IFFF Dortmund+Köln at zoler@frauenfilmfest.com

21 July 2022

IIFF International Images Film Festival for Women (Zimbabwe) 2022 CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS IS OPEN!

IIFF 2022 CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS IS OPEN!


Calling all Zimbabwean filmmakers!

Submit your film to

International Images Film Festival for Women


GO TO WEBSITE TO DOWNLOAD APPLICATION FORM:

https://icapatrust.org/news/iiff-2022-call-for-submissions-out/


Deadline: 15 August 2022


The International Images Film Festival for Women (IIFF) is an internationally recognised festival held to inspire positive images of women, interrogate, debate and celebrate the world of women, as well as the communities that women live in through films that exhibit gender sensitive narratives. The International Images Film Festival for Women (IIFF) was founded in 2002. IIFF is the only women’s festival South of the Sahara and has become an integral part of the local and regional film calendars and is a focal point for Pan-African film makers. The focus of IIFF is to show films that depict women in a positive light as well as films where men are shown advancing the causes/rights of women. Workshops and special discussions are also held during the festival. The theme for the 19th edition of the International Images Film Festival for Women (IIFF) 2022 is Women Crossroads.


We are looking for films that;


show women's contribution to a better society and world


must be about a woman and have at least one female lead role


engage with global issues and how they affect women


focus on the journey of African women


are about allies for African and African diaspora women


Submission Requirements


Completed entry form


A password protected preview of the film (Vimeo link or dropbox).


Digital press kit. The press kit should include three high resolution colour stills, full cast/crew list, directors statement, film synopsis. Posters are welcome but cannot be substituted for stills.


Please email all materials to reception@icapatrust.org or whatsApp +263774717190


Entry Requirements


Films must not be available on the internet.


Films should not have been premiered or screened in Zimbabwe 3 months prior to festival.


Films must have been produced between January 2017 and June 2022.


All non-English language films must have legible English subtitles.

You may submit email with mp4 or mov to reception@icapatrust.org via Wetransfer,or Dropbox


Dates


The deadline for submission is August 15, 2022.


Festival Dates 23 November -26 November 2022.


* For further enquiries you send an email to reception@icapatrust.org or a text message using WhatsApp to +26377471719

14 November 2018

Wild Track Newsletter #28 October-November 2018 about African women in cinema in Zimbabwe

Wild Track Newsletter #28
October-November 2018
about African women in cinema 
in Zimbabwe

The Wild Track Newsletter is published by the Institute of Creative Arts for Progress in Africa (ICAPA TRUST) 

The Wild Track Newsletter covers information, issues and events relevant and related to African women in cinema in general and specifically those from Zimbabwe, including coverage of the International Images Film Festival for Women (IIFF), the annual film festival which takes place in Zimbabwe. In addition, it covers gender related arts-based activities in the Zimbabwe area.

Back issues are also available on the ICAPA Trust site: Issue 27, Issue 26, Issue 25, Issue 24, Issue 23, Issue 22, Issue, 21, Issue 20, Issue 19, Issue 18, Issue 17, Issue 15, Issue 14, Issue 13, Issue 12, Issue 11, Issue 10, Issue 9, Issue 8, Issue 7.


The 17th edition of the International Images Film Festival (IIFF) took place during the last week of August 2018

Animation Workshop Brings Local History to Life

Mukanya explores the role of fatherhood

Students identified for first intake

New novel by ICAPA director Tsitsi Dangarembga on reading lists

03 November 2016

2017 Call for Submissions Now Open: International Images Film Festival for Women (IIFF) Zimbabwe


INTERNATIONAL IMAGES FILM FESTIVAL FOR WOMEN
2017 CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS NOW OPEN!
DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSION: 14 May 2017


Calling all filmmakers! Submit your film to Zimbabwe's biggest, fastest growing film festival.

The theme for the 16th edition of the International Images Film Festival for Women (IIFF) is OF WOMEN, BY WOMEN, FOR THE PEOPLE.

FESTIVAL DATES: 25 August to 2 September 2017 in Harare

IIFF is an internationally recognized festival held to inspire positive images of women, interrogate, debate and celebrate the world of women, as well as the communities that women live in through films that exhibit gender sensitive narratives.

We are looking for films that; show women's contribution to a better society and world engage with global issues and how they affect women show how men help women focus on the journey of African women are about allies for African and African diaspora women.


Submission requirements

- Completed entry form.

- A password protected preview of the film (Vimeo link or dropbox).

- Digital press kit. The press kit should include three high-resolution colour stills, full cast/crew list, directors statement, film synopsis. Posters are welcome but cannot be substituted for stills.

- Please email all materials to wfoz@icapatrust.org or upload them to Filmfreeway. Be sure to activate your press kit on Filmfreeway.


Entry Requirements

- Films must not be available on the Internet. 

- Films should not have been premiered or screened in Zimbabwe.

- Films must have been produced between January 2014 and May 2017.

- All non-English language films must have legible English subtitles.

- You may submit through Filmfreeway or submit a completed submission form to wfoz@icapatrust.org.


Competitions

MAIN COMPETITION – Films that feature a woman in one of the leading roles

SHASHA/ INGCITSHI/ ZIM EXPERTS (SIZE) – best Zimbabwean film competition

NEW MAN - Films that feature male protagonists in roles that promote and model gender equality and positive gender relations between men and women

WORLD’S VIEW – Full length films concerned with topical global issues that at the same time chronicle extraordinary journeys of the protagonists




27 March 2016

Zoom in on Women!: DEADLINE EXTENDED to 31 March 2016 – Women Filmmakers of Zimbabwe, WFOZ

Zoom in on Women! : Deadline Extended to 31 March 2016 – Women Filmmakers of Zimbabwe, WFOZ

Hey ladies, it’s time to tell our own stories!! If you are an African woman with a compelling story to tell, send your script to Women Filmmakers of Zimbabwe. This is your chance to make those films! Production dates 2016/2017.

Preference will be given to films with few characters and few locations. Scripts should be:

- 60-80 minutes long.
- Have a strong female protagonist.
- Original and the sole property of the applicant.

Successful scripts will be produced for a prominent African television channel. A workshop with experienced scriptwriters will be held to make scripts production ready.

Women of Zimbabwe is an organisation that increases the participation and production capacity of women locally and regionally in the audiovisual industry. It also brings women’s issues to the attention of the cinema-viewing and television-watching public.

So polish up those scripts and send them to:
Date extended to 31 March 2016!

30 October 2015

Call for Submissions: 2016 International Images Film Festival for Women (IIFF) - Zimbabwe


PRESS RELEASE


2016 CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS!

Fifteenth consecutive year!

Application form and further information:

Be part of the coolest, most independent festival in Zimbabwe, run by Zimbabwean women passionate about film!
The International Images Film Festival for Women (IIFF) 2016 retains the theme WOMEN ALIVE: WOMEN OF HEART! The theme celebrates for the third year running tough women who possess the rare gift of loving unconditionally; daring women, women who despite daily challenges emerge stronger.
The Festival is calling for features, documentaries and shorts in all genres for the main competition as well as non-competition and special competitions categories. To be eligible for the main competition, films must feature a woman in one of the three leading roles.
IIFF is pleased to announce that the call is open for films in the following special competitions in addition to the main competition. Films in these categories are not required to feature a female protagonist, but must reflect the gender sensitive ethos of the festival.
SHASHA/ INGCITSHI/ ZIM EXPERTS (SIZE)- SIZE is a platform for locally produced films or films directed by Zimbabweans in the Diaspora.
NEW MAN- This category accepts films that feature male protagonists in roles that promote and model gender equality and positive gender relations between men and women
WORLD’S VIEW- The Festival has something for everyone. The category accepts films concerned with topical global issues that at the same time chronicle extraordinary journeys of the protagonists. The World’s View Category accepts full length fiction and full length documentaries.
NB:
To be eligible, films may not have been exhibited publicly in, nor premiered in Zimbabwe in the six (6) months before the festival opens.
FESTIVAL DATES: 19-27 August, 2016 in Harare
Other national and international outreach dates TBA.
SUBMISSION DEADLINE: 15 May 2016

Contact Details
International Images Film Festival
Postal Address: P.O. Box BW1550
Email: wfoz@icapatrust.org 
Tel/ Fax: +263 4 862 355, Mobile: +263 775 553 273

07 July 2015

Wildtrack Newsletter #18, July 2015, published by Women Filmmakers of Zimbabwe (WFOZ)


The WILDTRACK NEWSLETTER, published by the Women Filmmakers of Zimbabwe (WFOZ) is accessible on the ICAPA TRUST website: http://icapatrust.org/news.html

The Wildtrack Newsletter covers information, issues and events relevant and related to African women in cinema in general and specifically those from Zimbabwe, including coverage of the International Images Film Festival for Women (IIFF), the annual film festival which takes place in Zimbabwe. In addition, it covers gender related arts-based activities in the Zimbabwe area.

Back issues are also available on the ICAPA Trust site: Issue 17, Issue 15, Issue 14, Issue 13, Issue 12, Issue 11, Issue 10, Issue 9, Issue 8, Issue 7.


Current issue contents include:






01 December 2011

Tsitsi Dangarembga Reflects on the First Decade of the International Images Film Festival for Women

Tsitsi Dangarembga at the Closing Ceremony
©IIFF
At the Closing Ceremony of the 10th edition, Tsitsi Dangarembga, founder and outgoing director, reflects on the first decade of the International Images Film Festival for Women (IIFF) passing the baton to Yvonne Jila.

It's been ten intense years of struggle. Ten intense years of insisting that there is a place for women, women of colour, African women, Zimbabwean women, in this industry that is so often closed to us. Ten years of sometimes having to throw tantrums to drive the point out. It has also been ten amazing years of sisterhood. I did want to prepare a speech, well you saw me carrying around things, etc., so I didn’t have time to.  So I am going to try to remember some of those amazing things that have enabled me to continue during this time, which has been a testing time I must say. I first came up with the idea of the film festival in 2001 when I came back from film school in Germany. And I looked at the landscape here and asked, 'what can I usefully do?' There was the Zimbabwe International Film Festival, which was running brilliantly and didn't need my interference, so I thought 'I couldn't do that'. It was not very easy to get money for production and I also realized that we needed a training platform.

The idea of a woman's film festival came to mind because gender is really one of the components of film that we need to look into very closely to see how films are affecting our world, and affecting our behaviour, especially our behaviour in gendered relationships. So I pitched the idea to a couple of people very tentatively and I was waiting for people to tell me that I did not know what I was talking about, which is what people say to me when I come up with ideas. One of the people that I pitched the idea to was Jackie Cahi and Jackie never says to me, ‘Tsitsi you do not know what you are talking about’, in fact she said, ‘that is very interesting!’ And Jackie was one of the people who really accompanied me on the journey along with Doreen Sibanda, and Soukaina Edom who teaches the dance foundation course. Together we would sit in each other’s houses and drink tea and plot and plan. We did manage to start the festival in 2002. That year we had six films from Zimbabwe—one 35 mm film. And that festival in 2002 was made possible because of two women at the British Embassy at that time, Grace Mutandwa and Sophie Honey, and the Belgian ambassador at that time, Madame Fankinett. And there have been other women in diplomatic missions and organizations who have been able to lend a hand. This has been the case really since it began. We have had the former German ambassador to Zimbabwe, Karin Blumberger Sauerteig. There was Madame Baherle from the French Embassy, there was Kari Thorsen from the Norwegian Embassy, so it has been such a pleasure to see women supporting other women. Of course we have men supporting us. The French Embassy continues to support us. The Embassy of Iran has been a big supporter with wonderful films.

And then there have been the men who have been supporting us. First and foremost my husband who sometimes did tell me that I did not know what I was talking about, but came on board nevertheless. We are moving more and more to engaging with men, as there are a whole bunch of young women who are very confident that they can handle the technical aspects, they are going all over the world telling people about what we have been doing. And so it has been absolutely wonderful. Then UNWOMEN (formerly UNIFEM) came on board to recognize another initiative, the Ndichirimupenyu Awards which honour women’s achievements, which was another idea that came out of IIFF.  The idea of IIFF is also to be a celebration of womanhood, in the narrative, in life, and in other forms of art. We have also had poets to IIFF, we have had dancers, we have had musicians. Over the years it has been an amazing journey and I just want to say thank you to everybody. I want to say thank you to the WFOZ members, former WFOZ members, would you stand up, thank you. And those young women who have stayed with me in spite of the tantrums.

It is not easy to run a festival like this for ten years; it really is an achievement. We are the first women’s film festival on the continent. There are some that have tried to take place and become professional. Most of them do not manage to become regular, but IIFF is the oldest; we have really tried to bear the torch for women’s filmmaking—here we have Angeline, a former chairperson of WFOZ, we have Florence who does wardrobe, we have Stella, an actress, some of you saw her in Nyami Nyami and the Evil Eggs, we have our own Charmaine, we have Porcia, and other members who could not make it today—all these young women have worked tirelessly. This year we worked for eight months without a single penny in our pockets. But we said, ‘we are going to make this happen’. I hope that people are not going to take the work of this film festival as the normal reproductive unpaid labour of women. I hope people are going to realize that our work does have a commercial value and to recognize that commercial value as the works of other festivals are also recognized.

Thank you very much to everybody. And having said that I think the only thing I have to do is say goodbye. I am not leaving the Women Filmmakers of Zimbabwe, which is the parent organization to IIFF, I am staying on as CEO because I do believe that mentoring is important especially when one hands over the baton and I will try to develop some of the other programs of the Women Filmmakers of Zimbabwe. I have also recently created a trust of the Institute of Creative Arts for Progress in Africa, our board member, Charles Chirikure is here. I want to get more involved in the structural issues surrounding the arts in this country because I have seen that the individual efforts of small organizations like this cannot really have the impact that we want. We have created a space but that space needs to be made more effective and so I am addressing some of the structural issues around art. Thank you everyone for your support. The Cultural Fund, Zimbabwe-German Society, the Swiss Embassy, British Council, the Embassy of Japan with those wonderful films, from the French Embassy, to all those people who have contributed. As Yvonne Jila comes over to tell you her vision of IIFF, as IIFF goes forward, I would like you to know that I appreciate everyone of you and this has been a meaningful time in my life, thank you.

November 26, 2011, Harare, Zimbabwe - Transcription by Beti Ellerson

LINKS:

Tsitsi Dangarembga: Filmmaker, Writer, Cultural Activist

Towards a Critical Debate: Nyaminyami Amaji Abulozi (Nyaminyami and the Evil Eggs), a film by Tsitsi Dangarembga

Tsitsi Dangarembga: I Want a Wedding Dress

04 November 2011

Yvonne Jila takes the torch as director of International Images Film Festival for Women (IIFF)

Source: Wildtrack Women Filmmakers of Zimbabwe Newsletter 3rd Edition (November 2011)
Visionary leadership, exceptional management and excellent communication are the lifeblood of any successful organization. These sustain the organization and direct it towards achieving the
vision and the mission. After more than 10 years of directing the only women's film festival South of the Sahara, the International Images Film Festival for Women (IIFF), talented filmmaker cum novelist, IIFF founder Tsitsi Dangarembga has finally passed on the torch. Yvonne Jila becomes the new Festival Director.

Having put structures and systems in place, Dangarembga's dream is to see others carry this tradition to future generation and one way to do this is by bridging the intergenerational gap, through skills impartation.

Born in 1984, Yvonne was born and bred in Bulawayo. She attained her Advanced level at Thekwane High School in 2002 and later moved to Harare where she graduated with a National Diploma in Mass Communication from the Harare Polytechnic in 2006. Yvonne, who is currently in her second year of study in Sociology at the Women's University in Africa holds a diploma in Public Relations and several certificates on proposal writing, reporting, and feminism.

Yvonne joined Women Filmmakers of Zimbabwe in 2008 as a Programmes Assistant and was later promoted to be Programmes Officer before assuming Festival Directorship, a position she currently holds. Her portfolio includes overall management of IIFF, fundraising for the festival, festival reporting and networking among other things. Yvonne strongly believes women can achieve great heights as long as they adopt the –do-it-yourself mentality and do away with the give-it to-me syndrome. IIFF, being the only festival of its calibre in the region that 'combats silent women's cries and helps validate their value as active and creative contributors has managed to create this platform.

28 July 2011

Tsitsi Dangarembga: Filmmaker, Writer, Cultural Activist

©Tsitsi Dangarembga
It has now been over 20 years since Tsitsi Dangarembga was catapulted into international renown with her first novel Nervous Conditions. Shortly after its publication she combined filmmaking as a mode of communication. She has become a cultural ambassador for Africa and Zimbabwe in addition to other capacities in the area of cultural production and scholarship. Here she discusses her role and experiences as writer, filmmaker, scholar, producer, film organizer, and cultural professional.

Tsitsi, you have had a parallel trajectory as writer and filmmaker, how did these interests take shape?

Initially my idea was to develop another skill, besides prose writing, that would enable me to earn a living. At that time, in the mid 1980’s, I could already see that skills in moving images narration were essential to the national agenda.  Our then Minister of Finance, Bernard Chidzero also saw a role for motion picture in development. That was good in that he incorporated film as an important medium for sending out development oriented messages (such as Neria – women’s rights, and many HIV films such as More Time, Everyone’s Child and Yellow Card.  The down side of this was that film became identified with social messaging in the minds of the local public. We had a strange dichotomy: film was either frivolous, meaningless entertainment, or it was disseminated of didactic developmental. The study of film theory and the way the medium speaks to the individual and shapes the individual consciousness, was still a specialist area.  But I had a premonition about these matters, so I decided to study film as an adjunct to making my living. I was aware I could read up the theory on my own, but needed guidance in practical matters. So I researched schools in filmmaking.  It was one of the great blessings of my life that I was accepted at the German Film and Television Academy, Berlin, where I received excellent tuition.

©Tsitsi Dangarembga on the set of Kare Kare Zvako
What do you find to be similarities and differences? What relationship do you see between literature and cinema?

At first I could not see any parallels in prose narrative and film narrative. I was surprised at how my approach to creating narrative simply did not work for film. I think the biggest difference for me was to understand the difference between who and why (prose) and what and why (film), i.e. character against action. It came to the point where I found that writing prose interfered with my learning the techniques of film narrative. But I was determined to conquer it. So I stopped writing prose.  With practice and good teachers, slowly and agonisingly, I became proficient in creating for film. Now that I am able to write both fiction and screen, I am more aware of the similarities than the differences.  The similarity is in what – character, plot, setting, and so forth – the traditional aspects of narrative. The difference is in how one manifests these to suit the medium.
       
Your role as film activist is apparent in your various initiatives in the area of cinema. In 1992 you created Nyeria Films, a film production company in Harare, what is its mission and what are some of the projects that it has undertaken?

The mission of Nyerai Films is to produce and distribute compelling international standard moving images product on issues that our societies have difficulty in engaging with. Zimbabwean society is a very secretive society. People seem to thrive on intrigue and subterfuge. This means the real problems are rarely discussed in the open with the idea of finding solutions.  Our idea is to bring these issues to the public attention through film. For example, one film that Nyerai Films co-produced concerns child sexual abuse. In the story in question was the abuse of a primary schoolchild by her headmaster, with the tacit consent of parents and other adults. This went on until one teacher started to question the situation. The woman who played the questioning teacher said she wanted the role because the kind of script we had showed that anything could be talked about, even if our societies thought the issues were ‘unspeakable’ as Toni Morrison so often describes in her writing.

So Nyerai Films mission is to make the unspeakable speakable. This is done by presenting difficult topics in the form of a compelling narrative, with all the visual and narrative spectacle that makes film engaging. This is one of the key issues, I find: what is to be the source of spectacle? Because spectacle in film is what is engaging visually. No one will watch a film for long if it hasn’t got any kind of visual spectacle. Sometimes the spectacle is only suggested, as in the short film about the abused girl, called Peretera Maneta (Spell My Name). Of course, a child having intercourse with her headmaster is a spectacle. We don’t show it. We only suggest it, but everyone fills in the act for themselves. It took me some time to distinguish between overt and covert spectacle.

©Tsitsi Dangarembga on the set of Kare Kare Zvako
You are a member of Women Filmmakers of Zimbabwe, (WFOZ) what are its goals and how do your activities and interests as a film professional coalesce with the organization?

When Women Filmmakers of Zimbabwe was formed in 1996, its general objective was to increase the participation of women in the film industry in the country.  I joined the organisation in 1998, at the personal request of the then Chair, the late Petronilla Munongoro, who was a Production Manager. That will always remain one of my highlights of my time with the organization—the fact that a competent woman called on another competent woman to work together in the medium. However, I quickly saw that the organisation’s goal could not be fulfilled without some sort of training or capacity building element to the programme, and most of the women who wanted to depict the things important to them in motion picture had no or little training. 

Realising this, I racked my brains for a platform from which to spring activities that gave women a chance in the industry, and sought to redress the kinds of images and messaging that women were not comfortable with. This idea took the form of a festival, which offers sponsors a platform, while at the same time enables them to contribute to worthwhile projects. The festival was the woman-centred International Images Film Festival for Women, whose first edition was in 2002. The festival features films with a female protagonist in line with a festival theme that is decided on each year. As I had hoped, we were able to stage other events in addition to the main festival. These other events include outreach programmes to communities that cannot reach the festival; training seminars, which produced the above-mentioned film on child sexual abuse Peretera Maneta (Spell My Name). WFOZ membership is increasing, especially amongst young women, who realise that moving images in this day of the Internet offer a career path. The enthusiasm that has stemmed from young women, and international filmmakers who have heard about the orgnisation as well as some who have attended the festival and met the women of WFOZ, has led to some remarkable developments.

One of these is the quarterly newsletter, WILD TRACK. We came up with the name to incorporate the idea that women are still not in the mainstream with respect to the medium, no matter how institutions speak about the woman question. The situation of women with respect to film sounds 19th century, and from the point of view of a woman filmmaker it is. Few countries have significant percentages of women in the industry. Fewer countries still have quotas of money spent in the industry going to women according to their equivalence in the population. Wild Track talks about all the activities of Women Filmmakers of Zimbabwe. It talks about films members make, such as the recently released documentary by Porcia Mudavanhu, Ungochani (Homosexuality). Wild Track presents the far-reaching successes of Women Filmmakers of Zimbabwe. There are so many of these successes, besides the festival and productions like Ungochani (Homosexuality) and Peretera Maneta (Spell My Name).

We have interns from various institutions each year vying for places in the office. Sometimes the departments of these institutions ask us to contribute to their planning. Then WFOZ members interact with the communities through our outreach screenings and subsequent discussions. Our films are invited to festivals, or members are invited to conferences. The important feedback from these events is included in the newsletter. Finally, we strive to continue our training programmes. Any news on training, whether our own seminar, or seminars by other organisations that our members or interns attend, are also included in Wild Track. Naturally, we also feature our current productions. Wild Track is a kind of barometer on the local film industry, as few events of note take place without a WOFZ member, or a person who is connected to WOFZ, being involved in some way. I always say it is hard to find, at the present moment, a film in Zimbabwe that is being shot without someone who has learnt something from periods spent at either WFOZ, or its sister organisation, Nyerai films.  I do not think this is an exaggeration. It would be great for us if someone could do the research and verify. 

International Images Film Festival for Women in Harare (IIFF) created in 2002, of which you are founder and director, is significant in its scope and vision. One important interest of the Festival is to mine visual representation, in particular, of African women. It is exciting to see this critical engagement with the critique of the image. How was IIFF conceptualize and what are some of its goals and objectives? 

IIFF was founded in 2002, a year which saw a proliferation of beauty contests in Zimbabwe and in the southern African region. We resolved to question society’s reduction of women to the object of the gaze, where the gaze is male and leads to male gratification. This time-honoured theoretical maxim is a starting point, which needed to be taken further in the Zimbabwean context, where many other possibilities of oppression beyond the male gaze existed. These ideas of the male gaze and making a narrative in film that does not rely on the male gaze are very foreign to just about the whole world. This is why it was particularly exciting when I was invited to take part in a meeting of African Women Filmmakers last year (2010), organised by the Goethe Institute in Johannesburg. As I understood it, the purpose of the meeting was to come up with some concrete and specific programmes that would contribute to the voice of women filmmakers on the African continent. This has also been the aim of Women Filmmakers of Zimbabwe, although WFOZ confined itself initially to Zimbabwe and then to the region and only thereafter to the continent. 

In any case, the meeting organised by the Goethe Institute was immensely stimulating to the continental and Diaspora filmmakers and film theorists who attended. The gathering formulated a manifesto that requested proper gender desks at all media outlets as well as 50% of funding for any media related exercise to be directed towards female players. This request was made to be in line with SADC quotas on women’s representation in decision making, since the filmmakers were aware of how often the role of the media is ignored in decision making issues. The meeting to ratify the manifesto was duly held at IIFF 2010, with delegates from Africa and European countries. We have so far received a small grant from the Urgent Action Fund. We have put in proposals for more funds for our advocacy in this regard, amongst our other activities.

Your doctoral studies in African Studies at the Humboldt University in Berlin, I am intrigued by the proposed title of your thesis, "The exotic has always already been known: changing the content of the black signifier as a means of improving reception of African films." Please talk about the research, your findings and the contributions you would like it to make to African cinema studies.

I have not completed my doctoral thesis, but I am hoping to find the means to do so. The idea for this research was inspired by the work on gender as a signifier in film, particularly the work of Laura Mulvey. My reading of Mulvey was that biological differences correspond to systematic differences with respect to how individuals are portrayed in film stories. According to Mulvey, the man is portrayed as the dominant character, while the female has no significance in herself in film narrative, but is only represented as an object of male gratification. This immediately said to me that the female is only represented as a figment of the male imagination. I thought one could expand the categories of difference beyond sexual difference, or even gender difference, to incorporate other aspects of difference. For me, these other categories of difference mean also race. However, I think Mulvey’s analysis can be extended to any other category of social difference such as class, or sexual difference, or indeed religious faith. What strikes me about Mulvey’s theory is that it gives us mechanisms for analysing outcomes of certain interactions based on the degree of difference or similarity of the players.  If that is unintelligible, that is precisely what I want to articulate in my research.

Thirty-one years after independence, twenty-three years after your novel Nervous Conditions, a quintessential discourse on post-colonial identity, how would you assess Zimbabwean culture today and what are your hopes for its future, especially as it relates to cinema culture.

In my opinion, the average Zimbabwean has become more desperate in the years since independence in 1980. Desperation is never a good state to be in because then one lets oneself open to all sorts of attacks which one would not otherwise give in to. Zimbabwe has indeed opened itself wide to attacks from the international community that would never have been launched against us thirty one years ago. Zimbabweans are accused of wholesale corruption from the bottom to the top. We are accused of poor fiscal management at government level. This poor fiscal management translates into either ignorance or wholesale corruption. Zimbabwe is accused of human rights abuse. We are accused of sabotaging our own economy and of defying international protocol. The list is endless. All the accusations can be traced to a single problem. This problem is called lack of morality in global parlance.  It is a lack of ‘unhu’ in the languages understood in Zimbabwe, or a lack of ‘ubuntu’ in the wider languages of our region. 

So I think, yes, we in Zimbabwe have lost the knowledge in the intervening thirty years of what it means to be human, to be ‘munhu’, and have humanity, ‘unhu’. We have listened too much to propaganda that tells us about our own inhuman destructiveness. We have read too many books and seen too many films that depict us as losers in the battle of knowledge. In my opinion, Zimbabwean culture today is a culture of intimidation, fear, malice and ill won gains. I do not know of a single sector, my sector included, where rewards are given in accordance to merits, whether these rewards are given by the government or international organisations. I can only hope that the people who control Zimbabwe’s narratives and artistic output understand soon the destruction they are doing to the nation by their current practices.


Interview by Beti Ellerson, July 2011

LINKS:

Towards a Critical Debate: Nyaminyami Amaji Abulozi (Nyaminyami and the Evil Eggs), a film by Tsitsi Dangarembga

Tsitsi Dangarembga: I Want a Wedding Dress

Tsitsi Dangarembga Reflects on the First Decade of the International Images Film Festival for Women

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