Saturday, January 29, 2011

Durban FilmMart 2011 Deadline Approaches

Press Release

Durban FilmMart 2011 deadline is around the corner
 
The deadline for the submissions for the second annual Durban FilmMart is looming. Set to take place in Durban from 22-26 July 2011, during the 32 nd edition of the Durban International Film Festival, the closing date for entries is 15 February 2011 . Aimed at raising the visibility of projects from the African continent and creating opportunities for African filmmakers, the Durban FilmMart is a joint venture between DFO, the film-industry development arm of the eThekwini Municipality and the Durban International Festival (DIFF), which is organised by the Centre for Creative Arts (University of KwaZulu-Natal).
 
The inaugural Durban FilmMart in 2010 saw 200 producers, directors, sales agents, distributors, financiers and funding organisations from across the world, attending meetings, project presentations and a series of master classes and workshops on the latest trends in film finance, marketing, distribution and new media technologies. Of the 75 qualifying applicants, 12 projects in both the feature film and documentary genres from as far afield as Egypt , Nigeria , Ethiopia , Zambia and Burkina Faso , were chosen to participate in the Finance Forum segment of the Durban FilmMart.
 
Commenting on the success of the first edition and noting the anticipatory interest of potential investors, Toni Monty of the Durban Film Office (DFO) added, “Film practitioners from all corners of the African continent are encouraged to take this opportunity as a means of promoting their projects, meeting lead experts and networking with industry professionals from across the globe”.
 
Peter Rorvik, Director of the Durban International Film Festival echoed Monty's sentiments: “ The Durban FilmMart will stimulate African cinema production and facilitate project collaboration between African filmmakers.”
 
The Durban FilmMart will also allow aspiring film producers the opportunity to be spotted for inclusion in the International Film Festival Rotterdam's CineMart one of the world's most respected co-production markets. Three producers who participated in last year's Durban FilmMart will attend the CineMart's 2011 Rotterdam Lab, a high-level producer workshop that supports independent film production, and provides an opportunity to meet and network with global film industry players.
 
Filmmakers preparing submissions to the Durban FilmMart can note the comments of Egyptian filmmaker Hossan Elouan, whose film Hawi scooped an award at the Doha Tribeca Film Festival. Elouan took part in the Durban FilmMart in July 2010 and described it as “an exciting experience - it gets all the participants under one roof, so they can exchange ideas, and do business together. It is also important because it puts African filmmakers and producers with the right industry contacts in Europe and North America , which opens doors for international co-productions with Africa , and better distribution possibilities for African films across the globe.”
 
Entry is open to:
•  Projects with an African citizen attached to one of the three key creative roles of producer, director or writer. Proof of African citizenship or birth must be provided through a certified copy of a valid African passport/birth certificate;
•  Africans living in the Diaspora, but who still have African citizenship or have proof of birth in Africa ;
•  Projects with a producer attached.
For more information on the Durban FilmMart and how to submit your project please visit www.durbanfilmmart.com
For further enquires contact email: durbanfilmmart@durban.gov.za or durbanfilmmart@gmail.com
 
Issued by the Durban Film Office and Durban International Film Festival
For enquiries contact:
Ms Tozi Mthethwa and Ms Mona Pilane
DFO Publicists
Tel: 031-705 7131/2989
Fax: 031-705 2479
Cell: 073 681 1234
Cell: 083 307 9067
Email: mona.pilane@gmail.com
Email: tozi@igulamedia.co.za
 
For media enquiries regarding the Durban International Film Festival:
Sharlene Versfeld
Versfeld & Associates: The Communication Works
Tel: 031-8115628
Cell: 083 326 3235
Email: sharlene@versfeld.co.za
 
For 32nd Durban International Film Festival 21- 31 July 2011 enquires
Tel: +27 (0)31 260 2506
 

22nd Pan African Film and Television Festival

Fespaco bounces back

Two young Burkinabe girls stand 25 February 2007 in front of a cinema theatre in Ouagadougou displaying films competing in the 2007 Fespaco. Africa's biggest film festival returns in February in the capital of Burkina Faso hoping to revive the continent's ailing cinema industry. Photo | FILE | AFRICA REVIEW |


Dated Wednesday, January 19 2011 at 14:40
This is the 22nd Pan African Film and Television Festival of Ouagadougou.Fespaco is considered as one of the biggest film events on the African continent. This biennial event brings together all the uneven years and for one week, African and not – African professionals and festival – goers from all over the world sharing one common factor: the African film and African Diaspora.
During this great film manifest, various film competitions are organized and professionals of the seventh art demonstrate their expertise and excellence to put the African cinema on the international stage. It is both a cultural event, through art and cultural expression, as a festive event with thousands of festival – goers who meet together every two years to communicate, to build relationships, to exchange expertise and to reinvent themselves.
Source: www.artmatters.info
Dates: February 26-March 5, 2011
Venue: Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso

Kenya's Homeboyz studios' 'Tinga Tinga tales', a children animation TV series aired on BBC

A twist to the unpretentious Tinga Tinga tale

A Tinga Tinga exhibition in Copenhagen. Photo | BERTHA KANG'ONG'OI | AFRICA REVIEW |
By BERTHA KANG'ONG'OI  (email the author)


Posted Thursday, January 13 2011 at 08:54
Last year was a great one for Tinga Tinga art - some original, unpretentious art from Tanzania that is currently attracting considerable global attention. There was an exclusive Tinga Tinga exhibition in Copenhagen last August; a piece of Tinga Tinga art returned an impressive $ 51,000 at an auction in Paris last October; then came 'Tinga Tinga tales', a children animation TV series aired on BBC, as created in Kenya's Homeboyz studios.
But these opportunities have not come without challenges: the television production, which is said to be one of the most ambitious animation production in East Africa, has left Tanzanian artists unhappy. Tanzania’s Tinga Tinga Artists Cooperative Society (TACS) and UK-based Tiger Aspects, the production company that produced the series, are warring. And up until a few days before last Christmas, it seemed inevitable that the tussle would end in up court.
So how did this dream project end up here?
Claudia Lloyd, head of animation at Tiger Aspects, was travelling in East Africa in 2005. It was in Tanzania that she came across the Tinga Tinga genre of art. She was quite impressed.
“Finally I met the cooperative’s representatives and we started talking.” Over the years, the production and marketing of the art has been under Tinga Artists Cooperative Society.
Animated dreams
At this stage, it was just a dream project. But Claudia believed so much in the potential of an animated film project of African tales that she went ahead with a pilot project in 2006.
“The initial plan was to do the entire production in Tanzania but it soon became clear to me that that would not be possible,” says Claudia. “The internet connection in Tanzania was not reliable and there were more trained animators and editors in Nairobi than in Tanzania. So Nairobi it was.”
After the pilot project, Claudia returned to Europe to look for funds for a complete series.
By the end of 2007, Claudia had successfully convinced BBC in London and Disney World in the US to buy rights to the concept.

Africa cinema faces moment of truth

Alassane Moustapha during the Rotterdam International Film festival. Photo/BELINDA VAN DE GRAAF |
By MWENDA wa MICHENI  (email the author)
Posted Saturday, February 27 2010 at 16:41
 
The Ghanaian blockbuster, Love Brewed In African Pot, was never the moment, neither was Kolormask, a Kenyan film that premiered during the inaugural African film week in Nairobi. It has been elusive, but the moment of truth for African cinema seems at sight. But some debates before the action.
Some believe Africa cinema must embrace the commercial filmmaking template now, others are still pursuing their governments to fund huge budget cultural films that must not have a mass appeal. And this debate on African cinema goes on and on. The eclectic reasoning has taken the more cautious route, mass appeal that has a cultural touch, reality in mind.
This comes at a time when the French, believed to have greatly influenced African cinema and Germans, are toying with commercial filmmaking.
Around the continent, several experiments are already going on, with a commercial model apparently shaping up. Leading the race is the Nollywood model- a simple digital camera, few locations and a movie to sell in the kiosks for local consumption. Several others scenarios are in the making, but South Africa’s dalliance with Hollywood big shots has been shaking myths on African cinema, literally.
Rotterdam festival
No wonder, there are serious debates around the issue now. At this year’s edition of the Rotterdam film festival, Africa cinema was the headline, there were several discussions around its future, a token or two for the surviving grandfathers of African cinema and plenty of African melodies and rhythms to crown the occasion.
Moustapha Alassane, the Nigerien animator credited with the first ever African animation, was in attendance. From Nigeria was Tunde Kilani, among a handful of other decorated African filmmakers.
Besides talk and dance, the Rotterdam festival offered opportunity to several young African filmmakers to showcase their works. One such was Hawa Essuman, a Kenyan with Ghanaian parentage.
Soul Boy by the 30-year-old co-director bagged The Dioraphte Award for Hubert Bals Fund film held in highest regard. This is testimony that a black Africa has a chance in the changing scene.
Not that African films have now become very popular at the global level, and neither are here about to get there. But, it is rare that an African film is awarded in the International Film Festival Rotterdam.
It tells the story of Abila, a 14-year-old boy, who lives in one of the most miserable slums in Africa.
Intrigues and power games
Though dwarfed by the artistic flavours and flamboyance displayed by Bollywood and Hollywood, Africa cinema is as old as the film reel itself, almost. But intrigues, power games and disregard have suppressed the growth over the years, something that may not be reversed in a day.
As early as 1896, there were cinemas in Africa, projected from a machine that had been stolen from somewhere in London. This is about the same time it was invented.
On filmmaking, it was generally a preserve of the settlers, telling stories they wanted to see and share, on Africa. Most were naïve, poorly researched and heavily influenced by the foreign interests that informed the settlers.
When Africans started telling their stories on film, most carried the hangover of the previous generation of filmmakers, and this went on, even became worse with the massive funding and training that came from Europe.
Most of the films that emerged from this class of filmmakers were high end, ignoring the mass market. This alienated the African filmmakers from their very audience.
But there was the exciting 90s. When the moment arrived, and cameras became more affordable and there was an opportunity for commercial-minded producers, mostly breaking from theatres and there was Nollywood, Riverwood and the rest of the woods that have spread throughout Africa.
As this boom spread, South Africa was debating how to fund their filmmaking. With a long standing filmmaking legacy, especially after several Hollywood filmmakers shot there, the country decided to fund their own, encourage skills transfer and that has been happening. No wonder, films like Tsotsi, Jerusalema that was all talk last year, and even District 9, had a commercial model inspired by Hollywood, style and trying to ride on the Hollywood distribution network.
The debate is no longer whether Africans can make films, but how to make commercially viable films that are intelligent and aesthetically appealing.

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Africa and the Movies

Today there is a great interest throughout the world in Africa. Its cinema is slowly entering the world’s film markets and the festivals. In the U.S., though not made by Africans, still “of African interest”, this week’s release of Claire Denis’s ♀White Material has garnered a strong review by Kenneth Turan in the L.A. Times.

Simultaneously poetic, dramatic and realistic, “White Material” is an altogether stunning work. Directed by Claire Denis and starring Isabelle Huppert in a bravura performance as a woman confronting armed chaos in Africa, this is filmmaking that is at once exhilarating and chilling, powerful and powerfully disturbing.

White Material: IFC has U.S. and Wild Bunch is the international sales agent.

Initiatives fostering filmmaking by Africans follow here.

Focus Features sponsors a special program, Africa First, to assist emerging filmmakers in their first short film. It awards five emerging African filmmakers $10,000.00 each towards pre-production, production, or post-production of their short film.

Sundance‘s 2010 lineup featured a new wave of filmmaking talent emerging from sub-Saharan Africa. The young filmmakers, exploring both new directions and traditional storytelling genres—both African and from other cultures—to tell modern African stories with a fresh sense of style and meaning had three films in Sundance. South African filmmaker Jenna Bass ♀ draws from ancient mythological storytelling traditions to create a kind of historical magical realism in relating a modern-day tale of warfare in Zimbabwe in her film The Tunnel. Kenyan filmmaker Wanuri Kahiu ♀ creates a brightly original science-fiction vision in her film Pumzi, a story of a botanist who risks everything to nurture a plant 35 years after the “Water War.” And Senegalese filmmaker Dyana Gaye ♀ draws from the fifties- and sixties-style French musicals to breathe fresh air into Saint Louis Blues, a buoyant road-trip tale set in the clogged urban streets and dusty roads of Senegal.

The European community, however, seems to be taking the lead in bringing African films and filmmaking into the international market place. Rotterdam Film Festival’s Hubert Bals Fund, IDFA’s Jan Vrijman Fund,the Berlinale and Gotheborg all have programs to bring Africa to the world cinema. Read more about African initiatives which have taken place this year including initiatives of Rotterdam, Berlinale, Cannes and others
The Hubert Bals Fund (HBF) and Jan Vrijman Fund (JVF) and the Cinema Mondial Tour.
These two Dutch funds, which provide support to filmmakers in developing countries, have set up a joint film program, the Cinema Mondial Tour, to tour film festivals in Africa until March 2011. Working together for the first time, they have created a program of films from various African countries, as well as other regions where the HBF and JVF are active. HBF films are from Kenya, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Guinea, Argentina and Malaysia while the JVF-supported documentaries come from the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Kenya, Zimbabwe, South Africa, Iran and Russia. All participating festivals make their own selection from the films chosen by the HBF and JVF. The film program consists of a total of 12 fiction films and documentaries.

Launching with a special advance screening at the beginning of June during the Ecrans Noir festival in Cameroon, the official starting signal for the tour of Africa was given on 10 July during the opening of the Zanzibar International Film Festival in Tanzania. A day later, on 11 July, the Rwanda Film Festival began and also screened the program, followed by the Durban International Film Festival in South Africa. The Cinema Mondial Tour will run until mid-2011 and will visit film festivals in other African countries, including Kenya, Ethiopia, Uganda and Benin. Hubert Bals Fund and Jan Vrijman Fund worked together with the aim of stimulating an independent film culture in developing countries. As part of the International Film Festival Rotterdam (IFFR), the HBF focuses specifically on the realisation of fiction films. The JVF, which is part of the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam (IDFA), is geared to offering support to creative documentaries. The policy of both funds is twofold: firstly to provide support to filmmakers in developing countries. Secondly, the financial resources made available must be spent in a developing country and both HBF and JVF stimulate the screening of the films in their countries of origin. The aim is for the Cinema Mondial Tour to be organized in other parts of the world, such as in the Middle East and Central Asia, in the future. The Hubert Bals Fund and The Jan Vrijman Fund are both supported by the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Hivos-NCDO Culture Foundation, the DOEN Foundation, with further aid for HBF coming from Dioraphte Foundation and Dutch public broadcasting network NPS.
The Hubert Bals Fund films:

Love Conquers All by Tan Chui Mui (Malaysia, 2006)
Soul Boy by Hawa Essuman (Kenya, 2010)
Un matin bonne heure by Gahité Fofana (Guinea, 2006)
Una semana solos by Celina Murga ♀ (Argentina, 2006)
Le jardin de papa by Zeka Laplaine (DR Congo, 2003)

The Jan Vrijman Fund films:

Congo in Four Acts by Dieudo Hamadi, Divita Wa Lusala and Kiripi Katembo Siku (DR Congo, South Africa, 2010)

Glimpse by Dan Jawitz and Alberto Iannuzzi (South Africa, 2005)

Santos by Rupinder Jagdev (Kenya, 2008)

Sea Point Days by Francois Verster (South Africa, 2008)
Shungu, the Resilience of a People by Saki Mafundikwa (Zimbabwe, 2009)
Tehran has no more Pomegrenates by Massoud Bakhshi (Iran, 2006)

Tishe! by Victor Kossakovsky (Russia, 2002)

Berlinale / Durban: Africa in Motion (AiM)

For the third year, the Africa in Motion (AiM), the U.K. largest African film festival invited African filmmakers to submit short films of up to 30 minutes for the festival’s short film competition. In order to target the competition specifically towards young and emerging African film talent, filmmakers who enter a film for consideration must not have completed a feature-length film previously. Films entered must have been completed in 2007 or after. A shortlist from all the entries was selected and announced by the end of August 2010. From this shortlist, the competition winner was chosen by a high profile jury and announced at an awards ceremony at the Africa in Motion festival in October 2010. The jury consisted of local and international film specialists and established African filmmakers. All shortlisted films will be screened at the festival. In addition to the overall first prize selected by the jury, an audience choice award was selected by the audience at the screenings and announced at the end of the festival. The deadline for short film competition entries has been extended to 14 June 2010. See their website http://www.africa-in-motion.org.uk for full submission guidelines and to download the entry form, read carefully through the submission guidelines and email the festival co-directors Lizelle Bisschoff ♀ and Stefanie van de Peer ♀ with further enquires at: submissions AT africa-in-motion.org.uk


And Deeper in Africa…

FilmAfrica! has been developed from an initiative of One Fine Day Films’, Tom Tykwer and Marie Steinmann ♀. The company joined forces with the Deutsche Welle Akademie to launch a new initiative that will offer hands-on training to budding African filmmakers. FilmAfrica! which ran the production company along with U.K.-based charity Anno’s Africa in Nairobi in autumn 2008, made the film Soul Boy by Ghanaian-Kenyan debutant Hawa Essuman. The initiative now receives $1.4m (€1m) in support from Germany’s Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ) over the next two years and will also receive support from the Goethe Institut in Nairobi. In addition, the Filmstiftung NRW has awarded $136,137 (€100,000) towards the production costs the next film, which will be shot this autumn. Guy and Siobhain “Ginger” Wilson’s Nairobi-based production house Ginger Ink, which was a co-producer of Soul Boy, will serve as the local partner for FilmAfrica!

Speaking to ScreenDaily, Tykwer said:

“This year’s project will be more structured than the pilot project of Soul Boy. There will be a series of workshops over a number of months before the actual shoot, and we will have 10-15 participants in six or seven department workshops. Out of a total of 60-100 people, we will then generate the crew which will be trained before we actually start shooting the movie. On Soul Boy, the film was the workshop. Therefore, we will know better what the particular skills and knowledge are of the individual people.”

Tykwer added some of the participants in the workshops may come from other East African countries such as Sudan or Ethiopia, but the focus will remain on Kenya. Screenwriting workshops have been already been held in preparation for the next film project, with more than 35 screenplays having been involved and developed.

“Out of these, ten major candidates are in the running, and we will then come down to three or four after the other training workshops in the summer. The final choice of screenplay should then be made with the director who is chosen from the workshops,”

Meanwhile, FilmAfrica! plans to continue the collaboration with German camera manufacturer and distributor ARRI, which provided equipment and post-production facilities to Soul Boy, and Tykwer suggested that the second film might be able to use ARRI’s new “Blue” digital camera. Soul Boy had its world premiere at the Rotterdam and Gothenberg International Film Festivals before being screened as a Generation Special presentation at the Berlinale last weekend. The film will be shown to the local Kenyan cast and crew in the Nairobi district of Kibera - where Soul Boy is set - on March 4.

Africa in Cannes

This year there was a huge increase in the number of films concerning Africa. Even the Cannes Classics is showing The African Queen.:) It seems almost every sales agent and organization was showing or offering a film about some part of Africa and its poverty, violence or redeeming factors such as art or music. This is just a sampling of some initiatives and films.

For the first time in 13 years an African feature competes for the top award at Cannes.The Screaming Man, Mahamat Saleh Haroun, a chronicle of life between a father and son evokes daily life in modern Chad, a country not at peace.

The International Emerging Film Talent Association and the Ethiopian Film Initiative joined forces to bring a group of young filmmakers from Ethiopia to Cannes for the first time.

Bavaria Film International showcased the South African film Life, Above All by Olivier Schmitz in Un Certain Regard which is currently South Africa’s submission for Academy Award snomination for Best Foreign Language.It was produced by Dreamer Joint Venture Filmproduktion/ Berlin in co-production with Senator Film Produktion/Berlin, Niama Film/Stuttgart and Wizard/Cologne.

Life, Above All

E1 has Bang Bang Club about a war photographer in South African townships now undergoing violent protests. It was recently picked up by Tribeca Distribution.

Pathé’s $6m Africa United, an ambitious U.K.-South Africa-Rwanda co-production filmed across three countries tells the story of three Rwandan children — Dudu, his sister Beatrice and his friend Fabrice — who embark on an epic journey across seven African countries to attend the opening ceremony of the football World Cup in Johannesburg, South Africa. Along the way they encounter everything from hippos to heists, find new friends and face up to issues such as Aids and child prostitution.The U.K./ Rwanda/ South African co-production is the directorial debut of Debs Gardner-Paterson. It is produced by Mark Blaney and Jackie Sheppard for U.K.-based production company Footprint Films, with Rwandan producer Eric Kabera for Link Media alongside co- producer Lance Samuels for Out Of Africa Entertainment and Mark Hubbard. The film was financed by Pathe, along with BBC Films, the U.K. Film Council and the Rwanda Film Commission.


www.Cineuropa.org also writes about:


Nigeria’s Nollywood eclipsing Hollywood in Africa
May 18, 2010

As cinemas close across Africa, homegrown blockbusters are actually eclipsing Hollywood on the African market. Armed with a few thousand dollars, a digital camera, and a couple of lights, Nigerian directors have created a $236 million industry and is the world’s third largest producer of feature films. The films are now also available online at www.nollywood.com


Ugandan film producers challenged by distributors
March 24, 2010

The film industry in Uganda and the east African region is growing, but film producers are still challenged by distributors.

Zimbabwean film industry in limbo
February 4, 2010

Zimbabwean film industry in limbo 4 February, 2010 A good number of Zimbabweans who enjoy watching Nigerian films not only fell in love with the actors and actresses, but also learnt how to speak English with an accent. From Ramsey Noah to Desmond Elliot, Ifeanyi Azodo to Genevieve Njaji, Mercy Johnson to Rita Dominic, Omotola Jalade-Ekehinde to Patience Ozwokor, these are some of Nigerian actors and actresses that have captured the interest of Zimbabweans.


Call to revamp film industry in Ghana
December 30, 2009

A Ghanaian playwright, James Ebo-White has emphasized the need for Ghanaians to attach great importance to the film industry in order to develop the country’s culture. He said culture is the life blood of every economy and developing it will project the country both home and abroad. According to him culture sharpens and influences the way of life of a people.


Despite rebate, Kenyan biz still struggles
December 30, 2009

The Kenya Film Commission has tabled an ambitious slate of incentives for foreign film crews, with a proposed 25% rebate for pics that can claim at least half of their principal shooting in the country. by Christopher Vourlias But with the proposals failing to gain traction in a government bogged down by other fiscal priorities, the financial climate hasn’t improved for filmmakers this year.

South Africa 2008 Co-Productions Analysis Summary
December 13, 2009

To date, South Africa has entered into four audiovisual co-production treaties with Canada (1997), Italy (2003), Germany (2004) and the United Kingdom (2007). The purpose of this analysis is to identify the real value added by co-production projects to the local economy, asses if co-production treaty objectives are being achieved and to also identify existing trends. Co-productions analysis will be done on an annual basis to…

From Africa No. 1 (Each day, Eugenie and her guests invite you to discuss major topics of interest to Africans living in Europe: Tradition and integration, discrimination, representation of black people in French society, education of children and also fashion, beauty, black, cooking , Business Africa , major events.) But watch out, it’s in French!


http://blogs.indiewire.com/sydneylevine/archives/africa_and_the_movies/

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Kenya Broadcasting Corporation (KBC) to get new Managing Director

Poghisio to name new KBC boss ‘by end of this week’

By Okuttah Mark

Posted Tuesday, November 2 2010 at 19:25

The new Kenya Broadcasting Corporation (KBC) managing director may be known by this Friday, a move likely to end speculation over the position.

The names of the three candidates short-listed by the KBC board chaired by Mr Charles Muoki, were forwarded to Information minister Samuel Poghisio almost three weeks ago.

Thirty-seven candidates are said to have applied for the job, but only eight were short-listed for interviews.

The three candidates under consideration are Mr Waithaka Waihenya, the acting KBC managing director; Mr Katua Nzile, a managing editor at KTN; and Ms Ann Njagi of Royal Media.

On Tuesday, Mr Poghisio acknowledged receiving the names.

“Three names were sent to my ministry while I was away in Mexico and a decision has not been made. I will make the announcement as soon as possible, probably by the end of this week,” said Mr Poghisio.

The minister could, however, not disclose who among the three is likely to be selected.

The KBC position fell vacant after the former managing director, Mr David Waweru, was sent home over controversy surrounding the broadcast of the World Cup football matches.

The government is said to have paid Sh75 million to secure a deal on the promise that KBC would look for sponsorship to recover the money.

Naming of the chief executive is critical to the corporation as it comes at a time when KBC is looked upon by other broadcasters to steer the country in the migration from analogue to digital broadcasting.

KBC formed a subsidiary, Signet, a few months ago to offer infrastructure distribution on a commercial basis.
The company will be responsible for digital signal distribution to all broadcasters.

Private financing

Kenya has set 2012 as the deadline for migration from analogue to digital broadcasting.

The government also indicated in July that it is in the process of splitting KBC into two — private and public — as a means of sustaining the corporation.

The move is aimed at making KBC more competitive while at the same time protecting its mandate of informing the public without the headache of pursuing profits.

The split has also been informed by the quest to have a commercial wing that is free of debt and tap into private financing from banks and the capital markets.

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

The Day God Walked Away-- A Kenya International Film Festival 2010 hit

The Day God Walked Away trailer onlineLe jour où Dieu est parti en voyage, or The Day God Walked Away, is a film that takes a very personal look at the Rwandan genocide, telling the story of a mother of two, a Tutsi, who is working for a Belgian family in Kigali when the genocide begins. The family leave her behind and she has to save herself amongst the slaughter.

The film features a powerful performance from the lead Ruth Nirere in what is described as rich and immersive film, and judging from the trailer it's going to be a powerful and emotional film.
The blurb for the film tells us a lot more:

Jacqueline, a Tutsi mother of two of the children, works for a Belgian family in Kigali. The family flees the machete-bearing Hutu thugs, but they can’t protect Jacqueline—they leave her to hide in the attic while looters strip the house bare.

Eventually, Jacqueline ventures out to search for her children and takes refuge in the tall grass near a pond, hiding from the voices that boast of raping and hacking up their victims. There, Jacqueline encounters a wounded man and nurses him back to health, but as he grows stronger her spirit undergoes a disturbing transformation.

Alternately terrifying and lyrical, this psychological study of the effects of a holocaust on a young woman is a powerful departure from previous cinematic treatments of heroism and white guilt coming out of the Rwandan genocide.


Thursday, October 21, 2010

On Zanzibar International Film Festiva (ZIFF)

ZIFF an’ a whole lotta mambo jambo
Zanzibar provided an evocative setting for an international film
festival with some disappointing organisational characteristics

http://ccms.ukzn.ac.za/images/Subtext/subtext%20spring%202010.pdf

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

The 5th edition of the Kenya International Film Festival (KIFF) is scheduled to take place from 21st October-30th October 2010

Kiff 2010 Flyer
 
The 5th edition of the Kenya International Film Festival (KIFF) is scheduled to take place from 21st October-30th October 2010 In 2010 KIFF will be celebrating 5years since its inception; in its 5years of operation KIFF hasexperienced remarkable growth, with each edition being better than the last. A lot of hard work, sacrifice, and teamwork has been put in by the Director, trustees, sponsors and the team and this is what has made the festival a success and at the same time contributing immensely to the continuous film development in the region. . read more
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