Galway African Film Festival
Galway African Film Festival (GAFF) is an annual African film festival taking place in Galway on the west coast of Ireland in late May / early June to coincide with Africa Day an annual commemoration on 25 May of the 1963 founding of the Organization of African Unity (OAU).[1] It aims to showcase the wealth and diversity of African film that would otherwise be inaccessible to Galway audiences. Secondly, the Festival aims to reflect and celebrate the culturally diverse profile of Galway society, the city with the highest percentage (2.8%) of people from African countries (Irish CSO 2006). The Festival is organised by the Galway One World Centre in collaboration with the Huston School of Film & Digital Media and the Galway Film Society. Venues for screenings of films have included the Town Hall Theatre, Huston School of Film & Digital Media, and Nuns Island Theatre. The Festival is supported by Irish Aid, Galway City Arts Office and the Galway Advertiser.
Programme
The Festival offers a big variety of genres of African Cinema, including documentaries, children's films, shorts, classic and contemporaries. The films are normally not on general release within the Republic, thereby providing people in Ireland an opportunity to see the continent of Africa through a perspective that is different from Hollywood. Guests at the Festival have included Keith Shiri (Africa at the Pictures, London), Alex Ogou (Lead Actor, Clouds over Conakry), Tandeka Matatu (Producer, Jerusalema) and Andrew Webber (Editor, Mirror Boy). Films in 2010 included The Figurine Araromire (Nigeria), Mascarades (France/Algeria) and A Sting in a Tale (Ghana),[2] while in 2011, the festival included acclaimed movies Benda Bilili (Congo), Microphone (Egypt) and The Atlete (Ethiopia).[3] In 2012 highlights included Viva Riva, an award-winning Congolese drama, two Egyptian films about the Arab Spring of 2011 and an Ethiopian / UK co-production, Town of Runners.[4]
History
The Galway African Film Festival was established in 2008.
2008
- Kirikou and the Sorceress
- Niger – Magic & Ecstasy in the Sahel
- Musical Brotherhoods from the trans-saharan highway
- Bamako
- Clouds over Conakry
- Azur & Asmar: The Princes' Quest
- Waiting for Happiness
- Bunny Chow
- Africa Unite
2009
- Kirikou and the Wild Beasts
- Zanzibar Soccer Queens
- Return to Goree
- From a Whisper
- Jerusalema
2010
- Bhovas & Sam
- The Legend of the Sky Kingdom
- Le Pèlerin de Camp Nou (Captain Majid)
- Mascarades
- The Figurine
- For the Best and for the Onion
- Arugba
- A Sting in a Tale
2011
- Pumzi[5]
- Staff Benda Bilili
- Satin Rouge
- Welcome Nelson
- Voices from Robben Island
- Microphone
- WWW What a Wonderful World
- Mirror Boy
- Manuscripts of Timbuktu
- The Athlete / Atletu
- White Wedding
2012
- All I wanna do
- Kinyarwanda
- Death for Sale
- Glitterboys and Ganglands
- Forbidden
- TamantasharYom
- Viva Riva!
- This is my Africa
- Town of Runners
- Anchor Baby
2013
- Mwansa the Great
- Fluorescent Sin
- Call Me Kuchu
- Dirty Laundry
- 'Material
- Nollywood Doing it Right parts 1&2
- Last Flight to Abuja
- Phone Swap
- Alaskaland
- Yellow Fever
- The Lion's Point of View
- Hasaki Ya Suda
- La Pirogue
2014
- Jonah
- The New World
- Half of a Yellow Sun
- African Metropolis
- Andalousie Mon Amour
- Tey
- Rags & Tatters
- Twaaga
- Kwaku Ananse
- Mother of George
- Forgotten Kingdom
See also
References
- ↑ Okoth, Assa. A History of Africa: African nationalism and the de-colonisation process. East African Education Publisher Ltd, 2006, p. 319.
- ↑ Andrews, Kernan (20 May 2010). "Africa at the movies". Galway Advertiser. Retrieved 18 August 2010.
- ↑ "Fourth Annual Galway African Film Festival to take place in May". Galway Advertiser. Advertiser.ie. 12 May 2011. p. 9. Retrieved 2 June 2011.
- ↑ Andrews, Kernan, "Galway African Film Festival", Galway Advertiser, 2012.
- ↑ 1FM. "1FM Local and Urban Music". Retrieved 2 June 2011.
External links
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