The purpose of the African Women in Cinema Blog is to provide a space to discuss diverse topics relating to African women in cinema--filmmakers, actors, producers, and all film professionals. The blog is a public forum of the Centre for the Study and Research of African Women in Cinema.

Le Blog sur les femmes africaines dans le cinéma est un espace pour l'échange d'informations concernant les réalisatrices, comédiennes, productrices, critiques et toutes professionnelles dans ce domaine. Ceci sert de forum public du Centre pour l'étude et la recherche des femmes africaines dans le cinémas.

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Showing posts with label Uganda. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Uganda. Show all posts

18 July 2023

Cinema Uganda: The First Edition of Women in Film (Empowering Women Through Film: Voices, Visibility, and Influence) 15-17 August 2023

Cinema Uganda

The First Edition of Women in Film

Empowering Women Through Film:

Voices, Visibility, and Influence

15-17 August 2023



https://cinemaug.com/


Announcement:


When we launched the Women In Film project, we were so keen and intentional about adding value to the craft but also giving women a platform, where they can network, learn and engage with other professionals in the creative sector.


The Three-Day Workshop is an opener to the 6months incubation program that we are to start as Cinema UG for Women in Film.


We have had discussions with all our facilitators, sharing with them the vision and where we want to go with this program.


Click the link to apply today: https://bit.ly/3JTAF7C for any of the following workshops and masterclasses.


1. Film directing masterclass facilitated by directors, Kizito Samuel Saviour and Rehema Nanfuka

2. Acting masterclass facilitated by Nana Kagga

3. Script and screenplay workshop facilitated by scriptwriters and film producers dialo ssekidde and nisha kalema

4. Is acting a business or a sense of passion? Do you have a projectable plan for the business you are IN? facilitated by business coach and expert Dr Noeline Kirabo (PhD)

5. Strategy for your career. How do you strategies for your career? facilitated by Arts Manager and creative director Dorothy Nabunjo

6. How to Ace Auditions and Banding as an Artist/actor facilitated by Sharon Gayita a casting director. 

17 October 2021

Esther Tebandeke: Little Black Dress - FESPACO 2021


Little Black Dress
Esther Tebandeke
Uganda
23mn - Fiction - 2019


Synopsis
A woman stuck in a cycle of routine, obligation and guilt figures out a way to reset her life amidst a feminist uprising.

Bio
Esther Tebandeke is an actress, dancer, storyteller and visual artist.

25 June 2020

An animation story of Ugandan scholar Sr. Dr. Dominica Dipio's work in orality, literature and film

An animation story of Ugandan scholar
Sr. Dr. Dominica Dipio's work
in orality, literature and film

“For us, Africans who are predominantly described as very oral people, the film medium is a very powerful continuation, in a way, of our orality. I am no longer that scholar who writes a fine paper and has it published in a journal.” (Video by Osmosis Films)

Source: https://www.carnegie.org/topics/topic-articles/african-academics/infusing-stem-humanities-values-and-ethics-africa/

Moreover, Sr. Dipio, who completed her doctoral studies at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome, was appointed as one of four consultors of the Vatican-based Pontifical Council for Culture in 2019.



Also see on the African Women in Cinema Blog: 
Gender Terrains in African Cinema (2014) by Ugandan scholar Dominica Dipio

31 October 2019

Ndiva Women’s Film Festival 2019: Sunday by Angella Emurwon (Uganda)

Ndiva Women’s Film Festival 
(Ghana)

Sunday
Angella Emurwon
Uganda
Fiction

Synopsis
Anna and JJ have loved each other from childhood and have been married a long time. But JJ has a debilitating mental illness that has slowly chipped away at their life leaving nothing but flat routine.  Anna starts each day the same. She has made a ritual of her life that helps both her and JJ cope. (25 min 27 sec)

Biography
Angella Emurwon is a writer, award-winning playwright, and filmmaker. She divides her time between an uneventful writing life in Tororo, Uganda and her exciting work mentoring screenwriters. She has written two radio plays that have won BBC Radio Drama awards; one of which, Sunflowers behind a Dirty Fence, is being adapted into a feature film. In 2016, she wrote and directed a short film, Sunday. (Source: http://maishafilmlab.org/maisha-mentor/angella-emurwon/)

30 October 2019

Ndiva Women’s Film Festival 2019: Demented by Josephine Kabahuma (Uganda)

Ndiva Women’s Film Festival 
(Ghana)


Demented (2019)
Josephine Kabahuma
Uganda
Fiction

Synopsis
Kansiime, a silent but smart mad woman observes her world and carefully lives through life looking out for her responsibilities as a woman in the house, together with her loud buddy, Mugume they flee from home onto separate paths looking out for food for them and their adopted daughter Kajoina. (20 min.)


Biography
Josephine Kabahuma is a Ugandan actress, writer and upcoming director working with Kyooto Media Group; she has worked on a number of projects as a writer, actress, director and script supervisor including; At The Garage, Kemi, Fidelity, Esteem, Demented, Equanimity, Judas Kiss and Breach among others. (Source: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm10883759/bio?ref_=nm_ov_bio_sm)

17 October 2019

Ugandan Eleanor Nabwiso, laureate of the African Focus Award for her film "Bed of Thorns", a film raising consciousness about gender-based violence against women

Ugandan Eleanor Nabwiso, laureate of the African Focus Award at the 2019 London ArtHouse Film Festival for her film "Bed of Thorns", a film raising consciousness about gender-based violence against women.

The film, produced and directed by Eleanor Nabwiso was made with an all-women crew.

"I want to put out more films about gender based violence in detail… The cultural norms in Africa believe that men should beat their wives, to show that they love them, or that a woman is beaten because she is guilty of something… A man beating his wife is wrong, not just in Africa but across the world. The message from this film is: 'don't keep quiet'... We call it 'bedroom matters', if you are fighting with your husband keep it in your bedroom…and when you come out of the bedroom, smile to the world, this is wrong, speak out, tell someone about it. (From BBC interview: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p07qzj3s)

Synopsis:

Bed of Thorns follows the story of Stella who is getting married in a few weeks but friends around her know she is being battered by her fiancé and their aim is to stop the wedding from happening. All of her friends are actually undergoing domestic violence from emotional abuse, physical abuse, bullying, and rape.


Links:
https://www.facebook.com/BEDofThornsfilm/


03 August 2016

Ugandan Kay Kyohairwe, aka Kowa launches crowdfunding campaign for her film “Beats in a Jungle”

Ugandan Kay Kyohairwe, aka Kowa launches crowdfunding campaign for her film “Beats in a Jungle”

PRESS RELEASE

Ugandan filmmaker Kay Kyohairwe, aka Kowa has recently launched a crowd-funding campaign for her first feature film, "Beats in a Jungle", that tells the story of a young woman who is abducted, and her fight to return home.


Visit the Beats in a Jungle for details about the crowdfunding efforts and to make a contribution.

"Beats in a Jungle" was inspired by Kowa's experiences at her organization Coalition for Human Rights & Education Uganda (C.O.H.R.E) where she worked with young Aboke girls and boys who were kidnapped in Northern Uganda. After time spent studying video production at London's Blake College, Kowa returned to Uganda to work on telling these stories through images.
Shooting is scheduled to start in late September in and around Kampala with an all-Ugandan cast and crew.

Photos:
C.O.H.R.E CEO Kay 'Kowa' Kyohairwe, pictured at Soochow Human Rights Conference, Taiwan

Cast members Benon Mumba, Shanice Kyozira and Timothy Mumba

Beats in a Jungle sketch


07 November 2014

Gender Terrains in African Cinema (2014) by Ugandan scholar Dominica Dipio

Gender Terrains in African Cinema
by Sr. Dr. Dominica Dipio
Unisa Press, 2014

Dominica Dipio describes the trajectory of the book Gender Terrains in African Cinema as an evolution through three continents, Africa, Europe and the Americas. She fell in love with African cinema around 2000, while studying in Rome. As a field of study, African cinema was relatively new on the continent at the time. She attended various film festivals in Europe in order to view films during which she met filmmakers and interacted with them, and as a Fulbright scholar in the United States she was able to concretize her research. She describes her journey in this way: "it started in Africa, it developed in Europe, and it was fine tuned in the USA." 

Book description:

Attaining its identity in the 1960s, African cinema is characteristically a post-colonial art form. The first group of filmmakers and critics saw themselves, together with the political elite, as responsible for building their new nations. They came up with a series of statements which underline what cinema should be in their contexts: an instrument for educating, decolonizing the mind, and developing critical participatory viewership. To some extent, cinema continues the role of the griot (an African tribal storyteller), with a difference. Interest in this subject has led author Dominica Dipio to analyze how cinema and the filmmaker are located within the predominantly patriarchal hegemonic structure, as she addresses issues related to gender and, in particular, the representation of women in African communities. The films selected for analysis are all directed by male filmmakers that are considered representative of African filmmaking. These films span from the 1970s to the 2000s, with a comprehensive analysis of how gender relations are reflected - in the portrayal of the girl child, the young woman, the more mature woman, as well as the grandmother - vis-a-vis their male counterparts. (Series: African Humanities)

Image Source of Sister Dominica Dipio: http://archive.is/ue2c1


Contents of book:

1. Theoretical introduction
-Theoretical frames of African filmmaking
-African Filmmaking
-African Feminism
-Selected films and book structure

2. Imaging the Girl Child
-Introduction
-Children in African colonial and traditional settings
-Children in adult worlds
-Portrayal of children in synthesis

3. Negotiating spaces within patriarchy
-Introduction
-Dismantling patriarchial logic
-The logic of bride price
-Questioning foundational myths and traditions
-Women in polygamy
-Polygamous men's 'fatal' attraction to young, sophisticated women
-Women under new economic challenges
-The feminine in the public sphere
-Male victims under patriarchy
-Conclusion

4. Positioning the elderly in gender relations
-Introduction
-Elderly women as centres of alternative authority
-Male-female dynamics
-The elderly as harbingers of change
-Conclusion

5. Recurrent trends in gender representation in African cinema
-Introduction
-Trends in the representation of women
-Implications for film theory research

12 August 2014

Four women among Open Doors (Locarno) projects finalists, Rungano Nyoni among award winners


Four women (Caroline Kamya, Sam Kessie, Alamork Marsha, Rungano Nyoni) were among the twelve African finalists selected to present their film projects at Open Doors (9-12 August) at the 67th edition of the Locarno Film Festival. Rungano Nyoni, won the Open Doors Grant and the Prix ARTE International prize for her feature project “I am not a witch”. Congratulations to Rungano, congratulations to all.
The Open Doors website describes this initiative as follows:

With the support of the Swiss Foreign Ministry’s Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC), Open Doors aims to support and highlight filmmakers from a region in the world’s South and East where independent cinema is vulnerable. Open Doors encourages the provision of funding for the selected projects, giving their representatives the opportunity to present them to international producers. (http://www.pardolive.ch/en/Pardo-Live/today-at-the-festival/2014/12-finalist-projects-selected-for-open-doors-2014.html NO LONGER ACCESSIBLE)

"Hot Comb", Caroline Kamya (Uganda)
"Unbalanced", Sam Kessie (Ghana)
"Fig Tree", Alamork Marsha (Ethiopia/Israel)
"I am not a witch", Rungano Nyoni (Zambia/France)

Follow link to description of projects: http://www.screendaily.com/festivals/locarno/locarno-2014-open-doors-projects/5075706.article 

09 August 2014

Fiction-Mirror-Reality and vice versa: The case of Nollywood, an Interview with Shari Hammond by GAYLOR LUKANGA FEZA | Fiction-Miroir-Réalité et vice versa : Le cas Nollywood, entretien avec Sharin Hammond par GAYLOR LUKANGA FEZA


Fiction-Mirror-Reality and vice versa: The case of Nollywood, an Interview with Shari Hammond by GAYLOR LUKANGA FEZA, 6 August 2014 for TERENGAWEB.COM. Photo: Terengaweb.com. Translation from French by Beti Ellerson.

Shari, our Ghanaian-Ugandan sister who for professional reasons lives between her two countries, once settled in, took the time to dedicate a few moments. I borrow a few words from this polyglotte from the languages ​​she speaks perfectly to wish you mukulike (Luganda) tusemerirwe kukulora (lutooro) akwaaba (twi and ga), wilkommen (German), bienvenue (French), welcome to an experience - that of an African woman, educated, professional, world traveller, intelligent, as I was told by an honorary ambassador speaking of her: welcome to a reality that is not fiction. 

For the record, this is the continuation of my article released Sunday, 6 July. An article in which I talked with you via an interview with Serge Noukoue, during the second edition of the Nollywood Week Festival that took place from 5-8 June at the Parisian cinema l'Arlequin.

This event was an opportunity to “tie myself in knots”, in the words of another friend, wanting to analyse the interpenetration between fiction and reality. While waiting to share with you my deep thoughts, please find in the following paragraphs my e-interview with Shari Hammond, in charge of partnerships for the association Okada Media, which organizes the Nollywood Week Festival. 

Gaylord Lukanga Feza: Shari, what is your background? Your story? Your relationship with the creative industries?

Shari Hammond: I studied international law with a focus on Africa. I have always liked to gain knowledge through reading, going to exhibitions and discovering different artists. I was very curious about the different African art scenes so I became involved with the online journal of contemporary African art, Afrikadaa. Later in 2011, I met Serge and the other co-founders of Nollywood Week. 

Recently, I've been able to work with “Writivism”, a literary arts festival in Uganda. 

For me, to promote, stimulate and develop African creative industries, whether visual arts, publishing or cinema, is a necessity, because it contributes to the cultural pantheon and to the country’s economic growth. 

GLF: Has your training been useful in your present activities? 

SH: My legal training has given me discipline and organization in my activities, for instance, it is easier for me to read and write partnership and other contracts. Or, still, to study the various options and to ensure legal action. 

GLF: What advice can you give to those who would like to work in the creative industries, and to avoid certain pitfalls? 

SH: I would say that one must dare to roll up her sleeves and get to the task as soon as she has a vision of what she wants to accomplish. Having an idea is good, but a vision is better. The vision is the road map that will allow any cultural entrepreneur to avoid faltering in times of trouble, which exist in any business. This kind of industry unfortunately suffers from a lack of funding and it is even more difficult in Africa. One must connect with the right people: those who believe in your project and are ready to invest in it morally and financially. 

GLF: How do you choose your partners? I am thinking of Total who supported this event, and l'Arlequin who again opened its door. 

SH: We like to work with people who offer quality products and services to an African audience or who do outreach to Africa. People who are aware of the potential and evolution, as well as the developments taking place on the continent. The people, the supporters who promote this Africa.

We are not restrictive in our collaborations. We want to encourage long-term relationships with establishments that have proven themselves and that do not compromise on quality and that respect their clients. 

Our meeting with Total was organised by our partners, the France-Nigeria Association in 2013. Since then, we have been engaged in many discussions in order to better understand our mutual values ​​and visions. The Total Foundation has decided to support us again this year because of our contribution to intercultural dialogue and because we create innovative access to new audiences. 

The Cinéma l’Arlequin, an emblematic space in the heart of Paris, gave us an opportunity with the first edition and we gain their confidence after this first success. Their support throughout the preparation to the culmination of the Festival was very important to us and we continue to thank them for it. 

GLF: How will the proceeds of the festival be used? 

SH: One thing to note is that festivals of this magnitude have not yet turned over a profit. The little money raised will be used for the preparation of the next edition and the related activities of Okada Media, the association that organises the Festival.

GLF: During my attendance at the Saturday event of the Festival, I could feel the enthusiasm of the public. Many were those who came only to find “session sold out”, even for the following day. For those who were unable to attend the festival or to gain access to the different sessions, will they be able to view these films? 

SH: In fact, like most festivals, it is best to clearly identify the screenings that one wants to attend and get the tickets as soon as possible. Many sessions were sold out and we are delighted. This festival was able to offer premieres for films that are inaccessible in France, and the audience who was present gave testimony of their interest and desire to see more films from the Nigerian industry.

Our greatest wish, as well as those of the directors and producers who were present at the festival, is to have these films available on as many platforms as possible. Partners such as Canal+ and TV Nollywood envision the acquisition of rights to broadcast some of these films. We shall wait and see. 

GLF: If you were to change anything for this edition 2014, what would it be? 

SH: Tough question! The challenges are only there to make us grow and to learn from it. I would emphasise perhaps more communication, especially to encourage filmgoers to get their tickets even before the Festival or the “Early Bird” specials, as we have already done. 

GLF: Can one already make a rendezvous for next year?

Yes, you may now sign on for next year with, hopefully, more films that will move you, and more meetings with the makers of Nollywood. 

GLF: Through its technique and means of distribution, cinema provides us with images and sounds that depict a living picture, imitating or characterising reality. What do you think is the role of those who create these images? 

SH: Cinema is aptly nicknamed the 7th art. Cinema is an art, it is there to sublimate, reveal, or portray or adapt a reality. The artist, in this case the director or producer, has the duty to follow her/his own ambition and vision, even if that art is a major vector of influences that we cannot ignore. And it is for this reason that there will always be more or less direct messages in the films. In my opinion, the role of the makers is not to achieve a specific task, but to do what they do with zest and enthusiasm, ultimately leaving their mark by continuing to inspire. 

GLF: Shari Hammond, thank you. 

SH: Thank you 

Interview by GAYLORD LUKANGA FEZA of the Congo, diploma in Accounting and Management for Terengaweb.com. 6 August 2014. Translation from French by Beti Ellerson.



07 September 2010

Caroline Kamya: Imani

Caroline Kamya: Imani (2009) Uganda

Imani means "faith" in Swahili, a quality required to overcome the challenges of life. Set in the course of just one day, this award-winning film ventures into the lives of three characters within the diverse landscape of contemporary Uganda.

In the course of just one day, we venture into the lives of three characters within the diverse landscape of contemporary Uganda. Imani provides a refreshing look at Uganda post Idi Amin, post LRA (Lords Resistance Army).

Caroline Kamya, gives us an intimate portrait of the lives of a child soldier, a maid and a hip hop dancer living in Uganda today.

"Olweny" is a deep thinking, intense 12 year old former child soldier. A new chapter in his live begins as he starts his journey to his rural home after a few weeks of post-war rehabilitation. Is he ready to return to his family who have not seen him for over 4 years or are demons of his past going to resurface once again?

"Mary" is a strong and determined 25 year old maid who returns from her village to a wealthy suburb in the capital Kampala where she works. Family responsibilities create havoc in her daily routine forcing her to make some tough decisions that will forever affect her life.

"Armstrong" is fun loving and talented 18 year old break dancer with a turbulent background. He makes plans to return to the inner city "hood" to stage a free dance performance but skeletons from his past, surface and force him to face what he thought he had left behind.

iMANi is a visual feast of stunning worlds revealing the little known city of Kampala and the formerly war torn region of Gulu providing a unique perspective from this region of Africa.

Music is an essential ingredient in this feature and the blend of popular contemporary local language acoustic and hiphop flavours, alongside traditional African beats carries the narratives, skillfully woven together to form the tapestry of both rural and urban life in Uganda today.

"iMANi" is the debut feature film by award winning director Caroline Kamya and written by her sister, social anthropologist, Dr Agnes Kamya. "The Kamya Sisters" are the ambitious filmmaking sister act behind IMANI.

The film is in Acholi, Luganda and English, with English subtitles.

Director's Statement
ImaniMovie

This is an exciting time for African Cinema. In East Africa specifically, cinema is now going through a renaissance with a small group of strong female directors emerging on the world stage. Their films are different from the francophone art house or the West African melodramas of "Nollywood". A new wave has come about and IMANI is a product from the "East African New Wave".

IMANI is a post hip-hop generation film. My influences reach from the great directors of the francophone African film genre (who I honor) to the esthetics of some European cinema (of which I am a great fan). African American filmmakers of the blaxploitation era have also made their mark on my work with a touch of the South American fiction film. I am a product of a global life and hence my work is deeply rooted in the land of my birth of which I am proud, is influenced by the places I have lived, the people I have met and the films I have enjoyed most. My aim is to produce a film that is a new way of making film narratives from our continent. The pacing and rhythm is very different from conventional western cinema which is very intentional. The slow moving intro to the fast juxtaposed cuts that pick up the pace in the latter sections of the film are reflective of my style of filmmaking. The use of music that is an integral part of life in Africa and in the Diaspora take centre stage in my film.

lMANI which means "faith" is so called because all title characters survive and rely on faith. The film is also a testament to the belief I have in our creativity as Ugandans. We can tell our own stories in a powerful and unique way, in our own voices. IMANI is the first feature to be filmed on a RED Camera in Uganda and also in the local languages of Luganda, and Acholi with a cast and crew of mainly inexperienced locals. In addition, for the first time the area of Gulu is captured on film by a local fiction filmmaker highlighting life after the conflict of recent years.

Source (Text and Image): http://www.africine.org/?menu=film&no=9445

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