This years program is an electric mix of twelve features and seven short
films, with eight features making their world or North American premieres. Seventeen countries are represented . Planet Africa opens with
Hijack Stories, an entertaining critique of North Americas depiction of violence. Co-curators Gaylene Gould and June
Givanni offer an authoritative survey of current African, African American, British, and Caribbean cinema that is enjoyable and provocative. By
all accounts, Ms. Givanni is expert at wrangling celebrities, intellectuals, and leading issues. She recently moderated Representing Africans in
the New Millennium: New Identities, New Styles, New Strategies, a lively discussion hosted by the Institute for African American Affairs at NYU
during the 6th African Film Festival/NY. Ms. Gould is apparently no less adventurous.
I think audiences will be surprised and moved by the diversity of the work produced in the Diaspora diverse in style, commentary, culture,
and aesthetic. The tapestry this year is very rich, said Gould of the Toronto program.
The thematic and topical landscape of Planet Africa is as varied and perplexing as that of the continent. Several of the films and directors
have been screened by AFF. Adanggaman and Passage du milieu dramatize stories of slavery, and another Lumumba recounts the struggle
for political freedom in modern Zaire. Bye Bye Africa and A Trip to the Country
explore the consequences of homecoming after years abroad, whereas Tourbillons, Auguy, and The Station
study dislocations in diasporic culture. Young people whose lives depend on their wits come into focus through Ali Zaoua and La Squale.
Racial prejudices twist the banality of Christmas with Granny and The Elevator. Love and its ironic effects become grist between couples
in One Week, Are You Cinderella? and En Face. And, of course, dreams of stardom concern several films El Medina / La ville, Hijack
Stories, Bàttu, and La saison des hommes.
Feature Films << |
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Ali
Nabil Ayouch
Morocco, 95 min.
Ayouchs film follows four 12-year-old boys (real street kids portraying their own lives) who live in Casablanca and their struggle for survival.
When one is killed, the three friends decide to give him the burial he deserves. It is a fable about quests, transgression, death, accomplishment, and
life.
Adanggaman
Roger Gnoan M'Bala
Ivory Coast, 90 min.
North American Premiere
Powerful and sure to be as controversial as In the Name of Christ, this film tells the untold story of slavery
in Africa and the despotic rulers who fed the slave trade. It is a work of historical fiction about King Adanggaman and his army of women warriors who
terrorize and enslave their neighbors and the plight of one mans love for the woman who captures him.
Bàttu
Cheik Oumar Sissoko
France/UK, 100 min.
World Premiere
Sissoko, director of La Genése returns to the Toronto Festival with an engaging, contemporary black comedy concerning the potent and often
hilarious mix of politics and superstition that is modern African city life. Isaach de Bankolé stars as a blind beggar who thwarts the government's
plan to evict the citys poor. Danny Glover as the charmingly corrupt president.
Bye-bye, Africa
Mahamat Saleh Haroun
France/Chad, 86 min.
A blend of fiction and non-fiction, Harouns first feature is also the first feature from Chad. Haroun returns home after 10 years in Europe, and
looks at his native country through new eyes the lens of his camera. As did Maral Tanie/Maral Tanie: la seconde éspouse,
this film offers a rare peek inside an isolated war-torn country and a beautifully captured depiction of the distance the lens can place between a filmmaker
and his subjects.
Hijack Stories
Oliver Schmitz
South Africa, 94 min.
World Premiere
From the director of the acclaimed South African film Mapantsula
/ Thief comes this high-octane, fast-paced satire of an undercover action thriller. The film follows an ambitious young actor living
in Johannesburg who decides to penetrate the crime world in hopes of method-acting his way into a part in a movie. This is an exhilarating and entertaining
critique of North Americas depiction of violence and how it effects or mirrors ghetto life beyond the studio lot.
Lumumba
Raoul Peck
France/Belgium/Haiti/Germany, 115 min.
North American Premiere
This compelling drama charts the short rule and brutal death of Nationalist leader Patrice Lumumba. Peck who directed Lhomme sur les quais
explores the birth of Zaire and the fascinating rise of Lumumba, a one-time civil servant, and thorn in the side of neo-Colonialism. Lumumba rose to become
prime minister but he lost both his power and his life shortly after.
El Medina / La ville
Yousry Nasrallah
France/Egypt, 90 min.
Ali is an idealistic, star-struck young actor who leaves the confining streets of Cairo in exchange for the more glamourous, and ultimately more dangerous,
streets of Paris. His dreams fade, but before Ali can return home, he loses his passport and his memory. In this tale of two cities, the making and breaking
of desire, and a celebration of a young mans irrepressible spirit, Nasrallah represents a fresh voice from Egypt.
One Week
Carl Seaton
USA, 97 min.
North American Premiere
In Seatons skillfully-crafted and courageous debut feature, a young man is thrown into turmoil when he discovers that a previous sexual partner
has been diagnosed with HIV. During the week between his own HIV test and the results, his entire life falls apart friends leave him, he loses
his job, and his fiancée calls off their wedding.
Passage du milieu
Guy Deslauriers
Martinique/Senegal/France, 85 min.
North American Premiere
Told by a nameless slave who survives the horrific voyage from Africa to the Americas, this docu-drama is a terrifying depiction of the 18-week trip.
Extraordinarily powerful, details of the African holocaust inspire human cargo with life and spirit.
La Saison des hommes
Moufida Tlatli
France/Tunisia, 124 min.
North American Premiere
On the small island of Djerba, the men work 11 months of the year in far-away Tunis, while the women remain confined to their mothers-in-laws homes.
The film follows one newly-wed woman who longs to break with tradition and move to Tunis to be with her husband. Tlatli who also directed Les silences
du palais has returned to the Toronto Festival with a remarkable new meditation on a favorite theme, the politics and experiences of Tunisian women.
La Squale
Fabrice Genestal
France, 96 min.
North American Premiere
A newcomer to a dangerous suburb of Paris, Désirée is a rebellious 16-year-old Black girl (a squale) who claims to be the daughter
of a legendary underground hero. New gang leader Toussaint, a violent and unpredictable young man, meets his match in Désirée, when they
discover a surprisingly tender love for each other. Genestals first film is based on his experiences as a teacher in a tough, urban school and inspired
by his students lives.
A Trip to the Country
Jean-Marie Teno
Cameroon/France/Germany, 75 min.
Canadian Premiere
Teno, director of Chef!,
Clando, and Yellow
Fever Taximan among others, is one of Africas most vocal documentary filmmakers. He returns to the Toronto Festival with a sensitive,
bittersweet film made on a recent trip across Cameroon. Returning from his base in France, Teno retraces his steps from the capital of Yaoundé
back to his home village. Along the way he charts the effects of western ideas of development on the country and its people.
Are You Cinderella?
Charles Hall
USA, 20 min.
A snazzy, jazzy fairytale in which a young man awakes with only a ladys shoe and a note signed by a mysterious Cinderella.
Auguy
Munga Tunda Djo
Congo/Belgium, 18 min.
Auguy is a young boy attending a pretentious Belgian Catholic school. Homesick and intimidated by an uncharitable priest, Auguy has to decide whether
to continue his European education or rebel.
Christmas with Granny
Dumisani Phakathi
South Africa, 28 min.
During a train trip home with his grandmother, a young man is forced to confront racial segregation when he falls in love for the first time.
The Elevator
Alrick Riley
UK, 4 min.
Director Riley collaborates with provocative British poet Lemn Sissay in this film about two men one black, one white and their thoughts
while standing in an elevator.
En Face
Mehdi Ben Attia and Zina Modiano
France/Tunisia, 27 min.
A compassionate look at the restrictions North African culture can place on women, this short shadows a young woman who is passionate about one young
man but is promised to another.
The Station
Aaron Woolfolk
USA/Japan, 13 min.
In this hilarious film, a major communication problem awaits an African American man waiting on a train platform in rural Japan.
Tourbillons
Alain Gomis
France/Senegal, 12 min.
Gomis has crafted a stylish short film about personal dilemmas of immigrant life in Paris. |<<