Cinema of Africa
African cinema is film production in Africa. It dates back to the early 20th century, when film reels were the primary cinematic technology in use. During the colonial era, African life was shown only by the work of white, colonial, Western filmmakers, who depicted blacks in a negative fashion, as exotic "others". There is no one single African cinema; there are differences between North African and Sub-Saharan cinema, and between the cinemas of different countries.
The cinema of Egypt is one of the oldest in the world. Auguste and Louis Lumière screened their films in Alexandria and Cairo in 1896 and the first short documentary was filmed by Egyptians in 1907. In 1935 the studio in Cairo began producing mostly formulaic comedies and musicals, but also films like Kamal Selim's The Will. Egyptian cinema flourished in the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s, considered its golden age. Youssef Chahine's seminal Cairo Station foreshadowed Hitchcock's Psycho, and laid a foundation for Arab film.
The Nigerian film industry is the largest in Africa in terms of value, number of annual films, revenue and popularity. It is also the second largest film producer in the world. In 2016 Nigeria's film industry contributed 2.3% of its gross domestic product.
History
Colonial era
During the colonial era, Africa was represented exclusively by Western filmmakers. In the first decades of the twentieth century, Western filmmakers made films that depicted black Africans as "exoticized", "submissive workers" or as "savage or cannibalistic". For example, see Kings of the Cannibal Islands in 1909, Voodoo Vengeance and Congorilla. Colonial era films portrayed Africa as exotic, without history or culture. Examples abound and include jungle epics based on the Tarzan character created by Edgar Rice Burroughs and the adventure film The African Queen, and various adaptations of H. Rider Haggard's novel King Solomon's Mines. Much early ethnography "focused on highlighting the differences between indigenous people and the white civilised man, thus reinforcing colonial propaganda". Marc Allégret's first film,Voyage au Congo respectfully portrayed the Masa people, in particular a young African entertaining his little brother with a baby crocodile on a string. Yet the Africans were portrayed as human but not equals; a dialogue card for example referred to the movements of a traditional dance as naive. His lover, writer André Gide, accompanied Allégret and wrote a book also titled Voyage au Congo. Allégret later made Zouzou, starring Josephine Baker, the first major film starring a black woman. Baker had caused a sensation in the Paris arts scene by dancing in the clad only in a string of bananas., one of the most popular actresses in the golden age of Egyptian Cinema
In the French colonies Africans were prohibited by the 1934 Laval Decree from making films of their own. The ban stunted the growth of film as a means of African expression, political, cultural, and artistic. Congolese Albert Mongita did make The Cinema Lesson in 1951 and in 1953 Mamadou Touré made Mouramani based on a folk story about a man and his dog. In 1955, Paulin Soumanou Vieyra originally from Benin, but educated in Senegal along with his colleagues from Le Group Africain du Cinema, shot a short film in Paris, Afrique-sur-Seine. Vieyra was trained in filmmaking at the Institut des hautes études cinématographiques in Paris, and despite the ban on filmmaking in Africa, was granted permission to make a film in France. Considered the first film directed by a black African, Afrique Sur Seine explores the difficulties of being an African in 1950s France.
Portuguese colonies came to independence with no film production facilities at all, since the colonial government there restricted film-making to colonialist propaganda, emphasizing the inferiority of indigenous populations. Therefore, little thought was given until independence to developing authentic African voices.
In the mid-1930s, the Bantu Educational Kinema Experiment was conducted in an attempt to "educate the Bantu, mostly about hygiene. Only three films from this project survive; they are kept at the British Film Institute.
Before the colonies' independence, few anti-colonial films were produced. Examples included Statues Also Die Afrique 50 by René Vautier, showed anti-colonial riots in Côte d'Ivoire and in Upper Volta.
Also doing film work in Africa at this time was French ethnographic filmmaker Jean Rouch, controversial with both French and African audiences. Film documentaries such as Jaguar, Les maitres fous, Moi, un noir and La pyramide humaine. Rouch's documentaries were not explicitly anti-colonial, but did challenge perceptions of colonial Africa and give a new voice to Africans. Although Rouch was accused by Ousmane Sembene and others of seeing Africans "," Rouch was an important figure in the developing field of African film and was the first person to work with Africans, of whom many had important careers in African cinema.
Because most films made prior to independence were egregiously racist in nature, African filmmakers of the independence era such as Ousmane Sembene and Oumarou Ganda, among others saw filmmaking as an important political tool for rectifying the erroneous image of Africans put forward by Western filmmakers and for reclaiming the image of Africa for Africans.
Post-independence and 1970s
The first African film to win international recognition was Sembène Ousmane's La Noire de... also known as Black Girl. It showed the despair of an African woman who has to work as a maid in France. It won the Prix Jean Vigo in 1966. Initially a writer, Sembène had turned to cinema to reach a wider audience. He is still considered the "father of African cinema". Sembène's native Senegal continued to be the most important place of African film production for more than a decade.With the creation of the African film festival FESPACO in Burkina Faso in 1969, African film created its own forum. FESPACO now takes place every two years in alternation with the Carthago film festival in Tunisia.
The Pan African Federation of Filmmakers was formed in 1969 to promote African film industries in terms of production, distribution and exhibition. From its inception, FEPACI was seen as a critical partner organization to the Organisation of African Unity, now the African Union. FEPACI looks at the role of film in the politico-economic and cultural development of African states and the continent as a whole.
Med Hondo's Soleil O, shot in 1969, was immediately recognized. No less politically engaged than Sembène, he chose a more controversial filmic language to show what it means to be a stranger in France with the "wrong" skin colour.
1980s and 1990s
's Yeelen was the first film made by a Black African to compete at Cannes. Cheick Oumar Sissoko's Guimba was also well received in the west.Many films of the 1990s, including Quartier Mozart by Jean-Pierre Bekolo, are situated in the globalized African metropolis.
Nigerian cinema experienced a large growth in the 1990s with the increasing availability of home video cameras in Nigeria, and soon put Nollywood in the nexus for West African English-language films. Nollywood produced 1844 movies in 2013 alone.
The last movie theatre in Kinshasa shut down in 2004. Many of the former cinemas were converted to churches. In 2009 the UN refugee agency screened Breaking the Silence in South Kivu and Katanga Province. The film deals with rape in the Congolese civil wars.
However a 200-seat cinema, MTS Movies House, opened in 2016 in Brazzaville. In April 2018, construction began on a new cinema in Brazzaville.
A first African Film Summit took place in South Africa in 2006. It was followed by FEPACI 9th Congress.
The African Movie Academy Awards were launched in 2004, marking the growth of local film industries like that of Nigeria as well as the development and spread of the film industry culture in sub-Saharan Africa.
2000s and 2010s
Contemporary African cinema deals with a wide variety of themes relating to modern issues and universal problems.Migration and relations between African and European countries is a common theme among many African films. Abderrahmane Sissako's film Waiting for Happiness portrays a Mauritanian city struggling against foreign influences through the journey of a migrant coming home from Europe. Migration is also an important theme in Mahamat Saleh Haroun's film Une Saison en France, which shows the journey of a family from the Central African Republic seeking asylum in France. Haroun is part of the Chadian diaspora in France, and uses the film to explore aspects of this diasporan experience.
Afrofuturism is a growing genre, encompassing Africans both on the continent and in the diaspora who tell science or speculative fiction stories involving Africa and African people. Neill Blomkamp's District 9 is a well-known example, portraying an alien invasion of South Africa. Wanuri Kahiu's short film Pumzi portrays the futuristic fictional Maitu community in Africa 35 years after World War III.
Directors including Haroun and Kahiu have expressed concerns about the lack of cinema infrastructure and appreciation in various African countries. However, organizations such as the Changamoto arts fund are providing more resources and opportunities to African filmmakers.
2020s
Some African countries suffer a lack of freedom of speech, that undermine the film industry. This is specially severe in Equatorial Guinea. The feature film The Writer From a Writer From a Country Without Bookstores is the first to be shot in the country and critic with Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo's dictatorship, one of the longest lasting in the world.Themes
African cinema, like cinema in other world regions, covers a wide variety of topics. In Algiers in 1975, the Pan African Federation of Filmmakers adopted the Charte du cinéaste africain, which recognized the importance of postcolonial and neocolonial realities in African cinema. The filmmakers start by recalling the neocolonial condition of African societies. "The situation contemporary African societies live in is one in which they are dominated on several levels: politically, economically and culturally." African filmmakers stressed their solidarity with progressive filmmakers in other parts of the world. African cinema is often seen a part of Third Cinema.Some African filmmakers, for example Ousmane Sembène, try to give African history back to African people by remembering the resistance to European and Islamic domination.
The African filmmaker is often compared to the traditional griot. Like griots, filmmakers' task is to express and reflect communal experiences. Patterns of African oral literature often recur in African films. African film has also been influenced by traditions from other continents, such as Italian neorealism, Brazilian Cinema Novo and the theatre of Bertolt Brecht.
In Mauritania CINEPARC RIBAT AL BAHR is an open air Drive-in Cinema located in Nouakchott, the only one of its kind in Africa. In addition to the projection schedule, the drive-in have a new application iOS and Android provides you with the biggest international movie database in which you can find information such as plot summaries, cast members, production crews, critics reviews, ratings, fan trivia, and much more about movies, series, and all cinematic work.
List of cinema by region
North Africa
- Cinema of Algeria
- Cinema of Egypt
- Cinema of Tunisia
West Africa
- Cinema of Burkina Faso
- Cinema of Mauritania
- Cinema of Ghana
- Cinema of Liberia
- Cinema of Niger
- Cinema of Nigeria
- Cinema of Senegal
- Cinema of Togo
Central Africa
- Cinema of Angola
- Cinema of Cameroon
East Africa
- Cinema of Sudan
- Cinema of Eritrea
- Cinema of Ethiopia
- Cinema of Djibouti
- Cinema of Kenya
- Cinema of Tanzania
Southern Africa
- Cinema of Namibia
- Cinema of South Africa
- Cinema of Botswana
- Cinema of Madagascar
Women Directors
Sarah Maldoror, a French filmmaker and the daughter of immigrants from Guadaloupe has been recognised as one of the pioneers of African cinema in the diaspora. She is the founder of Les Griots, the first drama company in France made for actors of African and Afro-Caribbean descent. Originally in the theatre, she went on to study filmmaking at the State Institute of Cinematography of the Russian Federation, in Moscow. In 1972, Maldoror shot her film Sambizanga about the 1961–74 war in Angola. Surviving African women of this war are the subject of the documentary Les Oubliées, made by Anne-Laure Folly 20 years later. Maldoror also worked as assistant director on The Battle of Algiers with filmmaker Gillo Pontecorvo.
In 1995, Wanjiru Kinyanjui made the feature film The Battle of the Sacred Tree in Kenya.
In 2008, Manouchka Kelly Labouba became the first woman in the history of Gabonese cinema to direct a fictional film. Her short film Le Divorce addresses the impact of modern and traditional values on the divorce of a young Gabonese couple.
Kemi Adetiba, hitherto a music video director, made her directorial debut in 2016 with The Wedding Party. The film, about the events involved in the celebration of an aristocratic wedding, would go on to become the most successful Nollywood film in the history of her native Nigeria.
Wanuri Kahiu is a Kenyan film director, best known for her film From a Whisper, which was awarded Best Director, Best Screenplay, and Best Picture at the Africa Movie Academy Awards in 2009.. Nearly 10 years after the release of From a Whisper, Kahiu's film Rafiki, a coming-of-age romantic drama about two teenage girls in the present-day Kenya. The film made headlines, partly for its selection at the Cannes Film Festival but also for its exploration of sexuality that did not sit well with the Kenyan government.
Rungano Nyoni, best known for the internationally acclaimed feature film I am Not a Witch is a Zambian-Welsh director and screenwriter. Born in Zambia and also raised in Wales, Nyoni went on to graduate from the University of Arts in London with a Master's in acting in 2009. Her filmography as a filmmaker also include the short films: The List, Mwansa The Great, Listen and she was also one of the directors of the international film project Nordic Factory. She has been awarded with a variety of awards including a BAFTA for outstanding debut by a British filmmaker for I am Not a Witch.
In 2019, Azza Cheikh Malainine became the first woman in the history of Mauritania's cinema to direct a fictional film. Her film SOS addresses the impact of modern and Security in Mauritania.
Directors by country
- Angola: Zézé Gamboa
- Benin: Jean Odoutan,
- Burkina Faso: Idrissa Ouedraogo, Gaston Kaboré, Dani Kouyaté, Fanta Régina Nacro, Pierre Yameogo, Sanou Kollo, Pierre Rouamba, Drissa Touré, S. Pierre Yameogo,
- Cameroon: Jean-Pierre Bekolo, Dia Moukouri, Bassek Ba Kobhio, Jean-Pierre Dikongué Pipa,, Francis Taptue, Jean-Marie Teno, Thérèse Sita-Bella, Jean-Paul Ngassa, Joséphine Ndagnou
- Chad: Issa Serge Coelo, Mahamat Saleh Haroun
- Côte d'Ivoire: Desiré Ecaré, Fadika Kramo Lanciné, Roger Gnoan M'Bala, Jacques Trabi, Sidiki Bakaba, Henri Duparc, Akissi Delta,
- Democratic Republic of the Congo: Zeka Laplaine, Mwezé Ngangura, Mamadi Indoka, Balufu Bakupa-Kanyinda, Joseph Kumbela
- Egypt: Salah Abu Seif, Youssef Chahine, Yousry Nasrallah, Ezzel Dine Zulficar, Sherif Arafa, Khaled Youssef, Marwan Hamed, Mohamed Khan, Shady Abdel Salam, Khairy Beshara, Samir Seif, Nader Galal, Ali Abdel-Khalek, Ashraf Fahmy, Radwan El-Kashef, Hady El Bagoury, Ali Ragab, Hala Khaleel, Ehab Lamey, Adel Adeeb, Tarek Al Eryan, Atef El-Tayeb, Daoud Abdel Sayed, Ehab Mamdouh, Sandra Nashaat
- Ethiopia: Haile Gerima, Hermon Hailay, Yemane Demissie, Salem Mekuria
- Gabon: Imunga Ivanga, Pierre-Marie Dong, Henri Joseph Koumba Bibidi,
- Ghana: Kwaw Ansah, John Akomfrah, King Ampaw, Yaba Badoe, Chris Hesse, Jim Awindor, Tom Ribeiro, Ernest Abeikwe, Ajesu, Leila Djansi, Shirley Frimpong-Manso, Halaru B. Wandagou, Nii Kwate Owoo
- Guinea: Mohamed Camara, David Achkar, Cheik Doukouré, Cheick Fantamady Camara,, Mama Keïta
- Guinea-Bissau: Flora Gomes, Sana Na N'Hada
- Haiti: Raoul Peck
- Kenya: , Wanuri Kahiu, Judy Kibinge, Jane Munene, Anne Mungai, Wanjiru Kinyanjui, Jim Chuchu
- Lesotho: Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese
- Mali: Souleymane Cissé, Cheick Oumar Sissoko, Abdoulaye Ascofare, Adama Drabo, Manthia Diawara
- Mauritania: Med Hondo, Abderrahmane Sissako, Azza Cheikh Malainine, Sidney Sokhana
- Namibia: Tim Huebschle, Richard Pakleppa, Joel Haikali
- Niger: Oumarou Ganda, Moustapha Alassane
- Nigeria: Ola Balogun, Tade Ogidan, Kunle Afolayan, Izu Ojukwu, Eddie Ugboma, Amaka Igwe, Zeb Ejiro, Lola Fani-Kayode, Bayo Awala, Greg Fiberesima, Jide Bello, Billy Kings, Tunde Kelani, Dele Ajakaiye, Chico Ejiro, Andy Amenechi, Obi Emelonye, Chris Obi Rapu
- Rwanda: Eric Kabera, Kivu Ruhorahoza
- São Tomé and Príncipe: Ângelo Torres, Januário Afonso
- Senegal: Ousmane Sembène, Djibril Diop Mambéty, Safi Faye, Ben Diogaye Bèye, Mansour Sora Wade, Moussa Sène Absa,, Tidiane Aw, Moussa Bathily, Clarence Thomas Delgado, Ahmadou Diallo, Dyana Gaye,,, Samba Félix Ndiaye,,,,, As Thiam, Momar Thiam,, Mahama Johnson Traoré, Paulin Soumanou Vieyra, Mansour Sora Wade, Ibrahima Sarr, Alain Gomis
- Somalia: Abdisalam Aato, Abdulkadir Ahmed Said, Idil Ibrahim
- Sudan: Gadalla Gubara
- South Africa: Lionel Ngakane, Gavin Hood, Zola Maseko, Katinka Heyns, Neil Blomkamp, Seipati Bulani-Hopa, Mickey Dube, Oliver Hermanus, Jonathan Liebesman, William Kentridge, Teddy Matthera, Morabane Modise, Sechaba Morejele, Nana Mahomo
- Togo: Anne Laure Folly
- Uganda: Usama Mukwaya, Kinene Yusuf, Kabali Jagenda, Mariam Ndagire, George Stanley Nsamba, Hassan Kamoga, Matt Bish, Carol Kamya, Jacqueline Rose Kawere Nabagereka
- Zimbabwe: M. K. Asante, Jr., Tsitsi Dangarembga
Films about African cinema
- Caméra d'Afrique, Director: Férid Boughedir, Tunisia/France, 1983
- Les Fespakistes, Directors: François Kotlarski, Eric Münch, Burkina Faso/France, 2001
- This Is Nollywood, Director: Franco Sacchi, 2007
- Sembene!, Director: Samba Gadjigo and Jason Silverman, 2015
- Le Congo, quel cinéma! - Director: Guy Bomanyama-Zandu, Democratic Republic of Congo
- La Belle at the Movies - Director: Cecilia Zoppelletto, Kinshasa
- Spell Reel - Filipa César, Guinea-Bissau
Film festivals
- Africa in Motion, held in Edinburgh, Scotland in late October
- Sahara International Film Festival, held in Sahrawi refugee camps in Algeria
- African Film Festival, held in New York
- The African Film Festival held in Dallas in late June
- Silicon Valley African Film Festival, held in San Jose, California
- Pan African Film Festival, held in Los Angeles
- Africa World Documentary Film Festival, held in St Louis
- Rwanda Film Festival, held in Rwanda
- Bushman Film Festival, held in Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire