Film

FSLC and African Film Festival, Inc. announce lineup for 23rd New York African Film Festival, May 4-10

The Film Society of Lincoln Center and African Film Festival, Inc. announce the lineup for the 23rd New York African Film Festival, May 4-10. Marking the 50th anniversary of Ousmane Sembène’s celebrated first feature, Black Girl, the 2016 festival is presented under the banner “Modern Days, Ancient Nights: 50 Years of African Filmmaking.” Opening with a special advance-preview town-hall event on Sunday, May 1, the festival will present 25 feature-length films and 27 short films from 26 countries, bringing another thrilling and multifaceted selection of African films from the continent and the Diaspora to New York audiences. The festival continues throughout May at Maysles Cinema and the Brooklyn Academy of Music’s BAMcinématek.

“We are very pleased to partner with African Film Festival, Inc. once again for the 23rd edition of the New York African Film Festival,” said Film Society of Lincoln Center Director of Programming Dennis Lim. “This year’s lineup is an extremely diverse and rewarding mix of features, documentaries, and short films that are an exemplary celebration of the continent’s rich and varied voices.”

“Although Sembene is no longer with us, his legacy looms large,” said AFF Executive Director and NYAFF Founder Mahen Bonetti. “He would be proud that a whole industry has been created following the model of Nollywood, with regional cinemas populating the continent. As was his desire, African films are now not just for export to other continents but increasingly those Africans whose stories are being told are getting to see them as well.”

This year’s festival kicks off with a preview town-hall event featuring the Digital Diaspora Family Reunion Roadshow (DDFR), a community photo-sharing session and veritable show-and-tell of fascinating family stories, on Sunday, May 1 at 2 p.m. at the Film Society’s Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center Amphitheater. Attendees to the free event are encouraged to bring their family photos, a selection of which will be shared with the audience. The DDFR Roadshow is a companion transmedia project for the Thomas Allen Harris film Through a Lens Darkly, and a panel discussion with African Diasporan creatives will follow the presentation. A digital exhibit of portraits and images from the DDFR Roadshow will run throughout the festival at this same venue.

Opening the festival is Tanna, the astounding feature debut of Bentley Dean and Martin Butler and the first feature shot entirely in South Pacific nation Vanuatu. Based on a true story and featuring members of the Yakel tribe in their acting debuts, it follows young lovers who break off an arranged marriage designed to bring peace to two warring tribes. Winner of the Pietro Barzisa Audience Award at the Venice Film Festival’s Critics’ Week, the film will be followed by a Q&A with Dean, the film’s cultural director Jimmy Joseph Nako, and film distributor Arnie Holland.

The festival Centerpiece is Ethiopian director Hermon Hailay’s award-winning Price of Love, an alluring tale of a young cab driver who intervenes in a fight between a prostitute and her ex-boyfriend, a pimp, only to find himself caught up in a seedy urban underworld. The film, which also features a cast with no previous acting experience, won a Special Prize at FESPACO and Best Film, Best Actor, and Best Actress at the Pan African Film Festival in Cannes. The evening will include a Q&A with Hailay.

The Closing Night Spotlight on Tuesday, May 10 includes Manthia Diawara’s Negritude: A Dialogue Between Wole Soyinka and Senghor and a shorts program about New York’s African Diaspora, with several filmmakers in attendance. Negritude imagines a dialogue between Léopold Sédar Senghor and Soyinka. Historian and Columbia University Director of Institute for African Studies Mamadou Diouf and special guests will partake in a post-screening discussion that illuminates this historic period in the context of contemporary society.

Continuing the conversation of the United Nations’ International Decade for People of African Descent, a number of festival titles address migration and ways members of the Diaspora reconnect with the Continent, while creating new spaces for expression and ideas of home. Highlights include Queen Nanny: Legendary Maroon Chieftainess, about the legendary warrior of the Jamaican Maroons; the Alice Walker-narrated documentary Yemanjá: Wisdom from the African Heart of Brazil, which takes viewers on a journey to Brazil to see the Candomblé spiritual tradition, a religion based on the worship of Yoruba deities; the Russian shortAbout a Mother, which imbues African spirit into an enchanting animation; and in In the Eye of the Spiral, narrated by Annie Lennox, about the Haitian artistic and philosophical movement known as Spiralism.

The 23rd edition also focuses on the correlation between activism and art, featuring the documentaries Martha & Niki, the story of the first female hip-hip duo to emerge victorious at the premier international street-dance competition, co-presented by Margaret Meade Film Festival; Intore (The Chosen), which shows how artists helped heal the Rwandan nation after the horrific 1994 genocide; Some Bright Morning: The Art of Melvin Edwards, which explores  a half-century of the works of the African-American sculptor and Pan-Africanist; and Purple Rain homage Akounak Tedalat Taha Tazoughai (Rain the Color Blue with a Little Red in It), the universal story of a musician with a dream—this time with Tuareg guitar music.

Tickets will go on sale Thursday, April 21. A pre-sale to Film Society members will begin Tuesday, April 19. Single screening tickets are $14; $11 for students and seniors (62+); and $9 for Film Society members. See more and save with the 3+ film discount package. Visit filmlinc.org for more information.

A reception will follow the Opening Night Film at the Frieda and Roy Furman Gallery at the Walter Reade Theater. Tickets for the movie and Opening Reception are $100 and are available online at africanfilmny.org. Regular festival prices apply for the screening only, and tickets can be purchased at filmlinc.org.

After opening at Film Society of Lincoln Center, the NYAFF heads to Maysles Cinema in Harlem (May 13-15). The festival concludes over Memorial Day Weekend (May 26-30) at the Brooklyn Academy of Music as part of its popular dance and music festival DanceAfrica.

The programs of AFF are made possible by the generous support of the National Endowment for the Arts, New York State Council on the Arts, NYC Department of Cultural Affairs, Bradley Family Foundation, International Organization of La Francophonie, Domenico Paulon Foundation, New York Community Trust, NYC & Company, French Cultural Services, Manhattan Portage Bags, City Bakery, Black Hawk Imports, Voss Water, South African Consulate General, Consulate General of Sweden in New York, Permanent Mission of Vanuatu to the United Nations, Hudson Hotel and Royal Air Maroc.

Films and Descriptions for New York African Film Festival
All screenings take place at the Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center (144 West 65th Street) unless otherwise noted

Opening Night
Tanna
Bentley Dean & Martin Butler, Australia/Vanuatu, 2015, 104m
Nauvhal with English subtitles
Tanna is set in the South Pacific where Wawa, a young girl from one of the last traditional tribes, falls in love with her chief’s grandson, Dain. When an intertribal war escalates, Wawa is unknowingly betrothed as part of a peace deal. Soon after, the young lovers run away, but are pursued by enemy warriors intent on killing them. Dain and Wawa must choose between their hearts and the future of their people, while the villagers wrestle with preserving their culture and adapting to the increasing outside demands for individual freedom. Bentley Dean and Martin Butler’s feature debut is based on a true story and its cast features members of the Yakel tribe in Vanuatu.
Wednesday, May 4, 7:00pm* (Q&A with Bentley Dean, cultural director Jimmy Joseph Nako, and distributor Arnie Holland)
Monday, May 9, 3:45pm
*Venue: Walter Reade Theater, 165 West 65th Street

Centerpiece
Price of Love
Hermon Hailay, Ethiopia, 2015, 99m
Amharic with English subtitles
Teddy (Eskindir Tameru), the son of a prostitute who grew up on the streets after his mother’s death, desperately tries to avoid the temptation of his old ways of chewing khat and drinking. His only support system is his priest, who bought him a taxi license on the condition that he live a decent life away from his past. But after Teddy intervenes in a fight between a prostitute, Fere (Fereweni Gebregergs), and her ex-boyfriend, who sells women to “work” in the Middle East, his taxi is stolen by the latter as leverage. As a result, Teddy finds himself caught up in a relationship with Fere, and during the search for the car, they discover the price of love.
Friday, May 6, 6:30pm (Q&A with Hermon Hailay)
Tuesday, May 10, 9:30pm

Closing Night
Negritude: A Dialogue Between Wole Soyinka and Senghor
Manthia Diawara, USA/France/Germany/Portugal, 2015, 59m
English and French with English subtitles
This imagined dialogue between Léopold Sédar Senghor, one of the founding fathers of Negritude, and Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka was reconstructed almost entirely from archival materials. It probes the relevance of the concept of Negritude against the views of its many critics, not only to the decolonization and independence movements of the 1950s and 1960s but also to an understanding of the contemporary artistic and political scenes of nationalism, religious intolerance, multiculturalism, the exodus of Africans and other populations from the South, and xenophobic immigration policies in the West.
Tuesday, May 10, 6:00pm (Q&A with historian and Director of Columbia University’s Institute for African Studies Mamadou Diouf + guests)

Closing Night
Shorts Program 2: Africa in New York (TRT: 61m)
A collection of films—all by or about New York City–based African creatives—reflect the experience of the New York corner of the African Diaspora.

Afripedia – New York
Teddy Goitom, Benjamin Taft and Senay Berhe, Sweden/USA, 2016, 12m
Part of larger docuseries, this installment of Afripedia is a visual guide to the creative minds in fashion, music, film, and more in New York. U.S. Premiere

Anton
Ntare Guma Mbaho Mwine, Uganda/Germany, 2016, 5m
German with English subtitles
A young German boy longs for his father in Africa.

Contained
Mamadou Dia, Senegal/USA, 2016, 8m
French with English subtitles
A man quarantined for being suspected of having Ebola begins to question his health as well as his psychological state. U.S. Premiere

Olive
Alfonso Johnson, USA, 2016, 7m
Young couples in NYC fall in and out of love.

Reluctantly Queer
Akosua Adoma Owusu, Ghana/USA, 2016, 8m
This epistolary short film invites us into the unsettling life of a young Ghanaian man struggling to reconcile his love for his mother with his love for same-sex desire amid the increased tensions incited by same-sex politics in Ghana. A New Directors/New Films 2016 selection.

New York, I Love You
Iquo B. Essien, USA, 2016, 21m
Viviane is a neurotic, struggling actress given to childish flights of fancy—like moving to Los Angeles on a whim. But can she really leave New York and Kazembe, the love of her life, behind? U.S. Premiere
Tuesday, May 10, 7:45pm (Q&A with Alfonso Johnson, Akosua Adoma Owusu, Iquo B. Essien, Maame Yaa Boafo, Mamadou Dia, and Hoji Fortuna)

’76
Izu Ojukwu, Nigeria, 2016, 138m
English and Igbo with English subtitles
’76 provides a deep and unusual portrait of the military—not of soldiers in battle but of soldiers and their families at war with integrity. The film depicts the life of Suzie, the pregnant wife of a young soldier accused of complicity in the abortive coup of 1976. Through Suzie’s struggle to find the truth and exonerate her husband, director Izu Ojukwu touches on the often invisible pain of the families of those who serve, as well as the enduring Nigerian cultural values of courage, resilience, patience, loyalty, and faith. Set during the oil boom of 1970s—a decisive decade in which Nigeria emerged as an economic giant—’76 is a stylized drama enriched with deep philosophy and history that celebrates the quality of the true African woman in a visually pure, emotionally engaging, and amorously therapeutic way. U.S. Premiere
Saturday, May 7, 8:45pm (Q&A with Izu Oujkwu)

Akounak Tedalat Taha Tazoughai / Rain the Color Blue with a Little Red in It
Christopher Kirkley, Niger, 2015, 75m
Tuareg with English subtitles
Akounak Tedalat Taha Tazoughai tells the universal story of a musician trying to make it against all odds, set against the backdrop of the raucous subculture of Tuareg guitar. The protagonist, the real-life Mdou Moctar, must battle with competing artists, overcome family conflicts, endure the trials of love, and face his biggest rival yet—himself. An homage to Western rock-dramas, particularly 1984’s Purple Rain, the film draws from the experiences of Mdou Moctar and his peers and is carried by stunning musical performances. The first fiction feature in the Tuareg language—meaning “Rain the Color Blue with a Little Red in It,” a literal translation of “Purple Rain” (Tuareg has no word for “purple”)—is by turns a window into the Tuareg guitar scene in the city of Agadez, an experiment in modern ethnographic filmmaking, and a celebration of cross-cultural collaboration.
Saturday, May 7, 6:30pm (Q&A with Mdou Moctar)
Monday, May 9, 2:00pm

La Belle at the Movies
Cecilia Zoppelletto, UK/Belgium/Congo, 2015, 67m
French with English subtitles
Kinshasa is a city of 10 million people without a single cinema. La Belle at the Moviesexamines the decline of the movie business in the Democratic Republic of the Congo’s capital city by putting us in touch with audiences cut adrift from their beloved theaters. Through passionate, insightful, and deeply nostalgic interviews with filmmakers, cinema owners, government officials, and film lovers, Cecilia Zoppelletto’s lyrical documentary reveals complex politics and past events inexorably linked to the fate of “the movies”—an industry feeling orphaned but living in hope for a brighter future.

Screening with:
Twaaga / Invincible
Cedric Ido, France/Burkina Faso, 2013, 30m
Mooré, French, and Arabic with English subtitles
In 1985, Burkina Faso was a country in the throes of revolution. Manu, a young boy who loves comic books, tags along with his big brother Albert. When Albert decides to undergo a magic ritual, Manu realizes there are real powers to rival even those of superheroes.
Friday, May 6, 4:15pm
Monday, May 9, 8:30pm (Q&A with Cecilia Zoppelletto)

Black Jews: The Roots of the Olive Tree
Laurence Gavron, Cameroon/Senegal/Israel/France, 2016, 56m
French, English, and Hebrew with English subtitles
Over the course of the 20th century, a large number of groups in Sub-Saharan Africa spontaneously converted to Judaism and claimed Jewish identity. These communities respect the worship rituals and dietary restrictions of Judaism, which they often learn from the Internet, as well as through Jewish culture (including cuisines, music, and language). Laurence Gavron’s film gives an account of this black Judaism through an African community— that of Cameroon, with Serge Etélé as its spiritual leader. Featuring an interview with Rabbi Capers Funnye, Michelle Obama’s cousin and leader of the black Jewish community in the United States.

Screening with:
The Dance of King David
Axel Baumann, USA, 2011, 32m
English and Amharic with English subtitles
In this documentary about the history and contemporary worship of the Ark of the Covenant, Axel Baumann examines the disappearance of the Ark from Israel and its reemergence in Ethiopia, and witnesses the “Dance of King David”—an ancient rite still performed by Jews and Ethiopians alike.
Monday, May 9, 6:00pm (Q&A with Laurence Gavron and Axel Baumann)

Cuckold
Charlie Vundla, South Africa, 2015, 95m
English and Zulu with English subtitles
The second feature by Charlie Vundla (director of How to Steal 2 Million, a selection of the 2012 New York African Film Festival), Cuckold tells the story of a young African-American professor in Johannesburg (played by Vundla) who falls apart after his wife leaves him for another man. While trying to drink himself into oblivion, he has a chance encounter with an old schoolmate who is now a homeless life coach. Together (with a little help from the drug trade), the two men prop each other up, and things soon ease back into normalcy… until the professor’s wife reappears sobbing at his doorstep. An unusual ménage à trois arrangement follows, one that seems destined to wreak havoc on the fragile state of affairs.
Thursday, May 5, 8:30pm (Q&A with Charlie Vundla)
Tuesday, May 10, 3:45pm

The Cursed Ones
Nana Obiri Yeboah & Maximilian Claussen, UK/Ghana, 2015, 95m
A series of misfortunes lead a West African village to accuse a young girl, Asabi (Ophelia Dzidzornu), of witchcraft. Their pastor insists that salvation rests in her exorcism and death, and uses his compelling rhetoric to incite fear into the people and to turn Asabi’s mother (Ama K. Abebrese) against her own daughter. Disillusioned reporter Godwin (Oris Erhuero) finds himself swept up in the witch hunt, and with the help of a young schoolteacher, he attempts to save Asabi’s life, fighting back against corruption and false prophets. Based on true events, The Cursed Ones is a story of morality, corruption, and community in the heart of Africa.
Thursday, May 5, 6:00pm (Q&A with special guest)
Tuesday, May 10, 1:30pm

In the Eye of the Spiral / Dans L’oeil de la Spirale
Raynald Leconte & Eve Blouin, USA/Haiti/UK, 2014, 56m
English and French with English subtitles
In the Eye of the Spiral details an artistic and philosophical movement born in Haiti called Spiralism, which has spread across the arts, touching upon spirituality (including voodoo and African ancestry) and even politics. The film sheds light on the state of a country hit by corruption and natural disaster, as well as the incredible will of Haitian artists who decided to produce art as a personal form of redemption and survival. With its striking imagery detailing the colors and flavors of Haiti, In the Eye of the Spiral reveals another side of the country through the fascinating voices of some of its most successful native artists. Featuring the poised and authoritative narration of Annie Lennox and the music of Brian Eno.

Screening with:
About a Mother
Dina Velikovskaya, Russia, 2015, 8m
Dina Velikovskaya’s animated short is about a mother who has given so much that it seems as if she has nothing left… until life opens up new opportunities.
Sunday, May 8, 7:15pm (Q&A with Raynald Leconte and Eve Blouin)

Intore / The Chosen
Eric Kabera, Rwanda, 2014, 64m
Intore offers a rare and powerful look at how Rwanda survived a tragic past by regaining its identity via music, dance, and the resilience of a new generation. It’s a story of triumph and a lesson in how to forgive and live, told through the eyes of a mother whose grief provides hope; an artist, who chooses to forgive rather than seek revenge; a maestro, who brings together the National Ballet with an incredible touch of genius; and a young man, whose determination and hard work has given the Rwandan culture a new dimension of identity and celebration. These characters and others show viewers how a nation rose above the ashes of a horrific 1994 genocide to become a world model of post-conflict peace and unity. Featuring performances from Rwanda’s top traditional and commercial artists in music and dance, interwoven with poignant interviews with genocide survivors and perpetrators who sit side by side, Rwandan leaders, and the Hollywood elite.

Screening with:
Some Bright Morning: The Art of Melvin Edwards
Lydie Diakhaté, USA/France, 2016, 51m
Born in the American South of the late ’30s during segregation, Melvin Edwards is now a world-recognized sculptor. As a black internationalist, Pan-Africanist, and one of the major Modernist innovators in the New York art scene from the days of Abstract Expressionism up through the current Conceptual wave, Edwards is one of the few African-Americans who has a particular strong connection with Africa beyond his origins. Lydie Diakhaté’s film reveals how in Edwards’s work, the global black initiative operates like a vital lifeline in his artistic expression and how exploring different techniques of welding and engaging his cultural and political values he established his own artistic language across five decades.
Sunday, May 8, 1:30pm (Q&A with Lydie Diakhaté and Melvin Edwards)

Martha & Niki
Tora Mårtens, Sweden, 2016, 93m
Swedish with English subtitles
In 2010, Swedish friends Martha Nabwire and Niki Tsappos were the first-ever female hip-hop dance duo to beat all of their opponents—men included—at the most important international street-dance competition, Paris’s Juste Debout. Armed with boundless energy and huge amounts of talent, they annihilated the opposition. But what happens when they don’t come out on top? After one such disappointment, the first cracks began to appear in their friendship, and in spite of their shared passions, the girls’ different backgrounds and personalities come into conflict. This documentary not only captures two successful dancers in action, but also two young adults grappling with very different life questions. Where are your roots, and what elements of your culture do you bring along from your homeland? How do you keep your heritage alive, and how can you deal with all of these things within such a dynamic friendship? Co-Presented by Margaret Mead Film Festival.
Saturday, May 7, 1:30pm (Q&A with Tora Mårtens and Niki Tsappos)

Pastor Paul
Jules David Bartkowski, USA/Ghana/Nigeria, 2015, 70m
An interesting take on the “white man in Africa” tale, Pastor Paul relates the story of Benjamin (Bartkowski), a tourist who becomes possessed by a ghost after being cast as one in a Nollywood film. Framed as a Chaplin-esque fool, Benjamin wanders around cities and villages seeking the mathematical secrets behind African drumming, only to have his project disturbed when his body becomes a vessel for the spirit of a colonial-era white missionary. Suddenly he’s prone to uncontrollable utterances and tongue-speaking bible quotes—words of his Nollywood character’s namesake, Pastor Paul.

Screening with:
Hex
Clarence Peters, Nigeria, 2015, 26m
Edgy and suspenseful, Hex centers on five young friends and how one night’s mistake still haunts them a year later. U.S. Premiere
Friday, May 6, 9:00pm (Q&A with Jules David Bartkowski)

Queen Nanny: Legendary Maroon Chieftainess
Roy T. Anderson, Jamaica, 2015, 59m
Jamaican Patois and English with English subtitles
Nanny was a queen captured in her homeland and forcibly transported across the Atlantic Ocean in the belly of a slave ship. In the New World, she rose up to become the leader of a new nation—of free Africans. However, not many people outside of Jamaica know about the legendary warrior chieftainess of the Jamaican Maroons. She is the only female among Jamaica’s seven national heroes, and her likeness appears on the country’s $500 bill, yet little is known about her. This landmark documentary, conceived by award-winning Jamaican-born, New Jersey–based filmmaker Roy T. Anderson and history professor Harcourt T. Fuller, unearths and examines this mysterious figure, who led a band of former enslaved Africans in the rugged and remote interiors of Jamaica in their victory over the British army during the early to mid-18th century.

Screening with:
Yemanjá: Wisdom from the African Heart of Brazil
Donna C. Roberts & Donna Read, USA/Brazil, 2015, 52m
English and Portuguese with English subtitles
This documentary, narrated by the Pulitzer Prize–winning author Alice Walker, explores the ethics, social justice, racism, ecological sustainability, and power found in community and faith via the stories of four extraordinary elder female leaders of the Afro-indigenous Candomblé spiritual tradition in Bahia, Brazil. In metropolitan Salvador, the Americas’ main port during the transatlantic slave trade, slavery’s brutal history was transformed into a vibrant religio-cultural tradition in Brazil, the world’s largest Catholic country. Candomblé is a brilliant example of resilience, profound dedication to one’s heritage, and the forces of nature that sustain us all. In the face of tremendous planetary and humanitarian crises, these ancient wisdoms offer inspiration for our shared global concerns. Co-Presented by Cinema Tropical.
Sunday, May 8, 4:15pm (Q&A with Roy T. Anderson and Donna C. Roberts)

While You Weren’t Looking
Catherine Stewart, South Africa, 2015, 104m
English, Xhosa, and Afrikaans with English subtitles
Catherine Stewart’s feature debut takes a look at South Africa through the experiences of a cross section of queer relationships in Cape Town. The changing landscape of post-Apartheid South African politics and lifestyles is portrayed through two central relationships: a successful black real-estate agent who is cheating on her white wife; and their bohemian daughter, who’s dating a gender-nonconforming woman in the Khayelitsha township. Beautifully shot on locations in and around Cape Town, with a stellar South African cast and a soundtrack of great local music, While You Weren’t Looking wrestles with the complexities of queerness and its overarching intricacies of class and fading relationships.
Friday, May 6, 2:00pm
Sunday, May 8, 9:15pm

Shorts Program 1: Quartiers Lointains (TRT: 103m)
“Paris, ooh la la!” “Voulez-vous coucher avec moi?” Declaimed in the language of Molière, these sentences do not fail to impact when speaking of France abroad, because love is part of the French culture, and emerging filmmakers emerging in the country do not fail to deal with it. Through the male sexual confusion of Yohann Kouam’s The Return,  dancing bodies and timidity in Jean-Charles Mbotti Malolo’s The Sense of Touch, the complexity of traditional weddings in Zangro’s Destino, and also through the difficulty to love that Alice Diop interrogates in Towards Tenderness. The short films of this program shake us, move us, and amaze us by seizing a French—but also universal—feeling.

The Return / Le Retour
Yohann Kouam, France, 2013, 22m
French with English subtitles
When the older brother he idolizes comes back home after a year away, Willy realizes that he doesn’t know him as well as he thought. An NYFF52 selection.

The Sense of Touch / Le sens du toucher
Jean-Charles Mbotti Malolo, France, 2015, 15m
French with English subtitles
Chloe and Louis are deaf and mute. They are also secretly in love, but they don’t admit it. Their gestures are substitutes for words, and as they dance, each word is choreography. U.S. Premiere

Destino
Zangro, France, 2015, 26m
French with English subtitles
Two young guys from the neighborhood, Loïc and Mehdi, have set up a little business filming Arabic wedding celebrations and then editing them in the “audiovisual laboratory” in their minivan. But when Mehdi starts to film the marriage of his pretty ex-girlfriend, fate steps in. U.S. Premiere

Towards Tenderness / Vers la tendresse
Alice Diop, France, 2015, 40m
French with English subtitles
An intimate exploration of a masculine territory in a French suburb, Towards Tendernessfollows a group of vagrant men, while a universe is revealed where female bodies are nothing more than ghostly and virtual silhouettes. U.S. Premiere
Saturday, May 7, 4:00pm (Q&A with Alice Diop and programmer Claire Diao)

Special Events:
New York African Film Festival Town Hall Event: Digital Diaspora Family Reunion Roadshow
The 23rd New York African Film Festival opens with a special live, interactive town hall event featuring the Digital Diaspora Family Reunion Roadshow. New Yorkers are invited to share their family photos and stories, and discover the communal linkages that underlie our common humanity. A panel discussion with African Diasporan creatives will follow the event.
Sunday, May 1, 2:00pm*
*Venue: Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center, Amphitheater, 144 West 65th Street

Digital Exhibit: Digital Diaspora Family Reunion Roadshow*
A digital art exhibit featuring portraits and images from the Digital Diaspora Family Reunion Roadshow will serve as a companion piece to the 23rd New York African Film Festival.
*Venue: Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center, Amphitheater, 144 West 65th Street

Public Screening Schedule for 2016 New York African Film Festival

Directors and/or guest speakers will be present during the festival (indicated by an asterisk* before the show time). ALL FILMS IN NON-ENGLISH LANGUAGES WILL BE SUBTITLED IN ENGLISH.

Screening Venues:
Film Society of Lincoln Center:
Walter Reade Theater (165 West 65th Street, between Broadway and Amsterdam) and Francesca Beale Theater (144 West 65 Street, between Broadway and Amsterdam)

Wednesday, May 4 (Walter Reade Theater)
7:00pm    *Tanna (104m ) – OPENING NIGHT FILM
9:00pm    Opening Night Reception—Furman Gallery

Thursday, May 5 (Francesca Beale Theater)
6:00pm    *The Cursed Ones (95m)
8:30pm    *Cuckold (95m)

Friday, May 6 (Francesca Beale Theater)
2:00pm    While You Weren’t Looking (104m)
4:15pm    La Belle at the Movies (67m) + Twagga (30m)
6:30pm    *Price of Love (99m) – CENTERPIECE FILM
9:00pm    Pastor Paul (70m) + Hex (26m)

Saturday, May 7 (Francesca Beale Theater)
1:30pm    *Martha & Niki (93m)
4:00pm    *Shorts Program #1: Quartiers Lointains (103m)
6:30pm    *Akounak Tedelat Taha Tazoughai (75m)
9:45pm    *’76 (138m)

Sunday, May 8 (Francesca Beale Theater)
1:30pm    *Intore (64m) + Some Bright Morning: The Art of Melvin Edwards (51m)
4:15pm    *Queen Nanny: Legendary Maroon Chieftainess (59m) + Yemanja: Wisdom from the African Heart of Brazil (52m)
7:15pm    *In the Eye of the Spiral (56m) + About a Mother (8m)
9:15pm    While You Weren’t Looking (104m)

Monday, May 9 (Francesca Beale Theater)
2:00pm    Akounak Tedelat Taha Tazoughai (75m)
3:45pm    Tanna (104m)
6:00pm    *Black Jews: The Roots of the Olive Tree (56m) + The Dance of King David (32m)
8:30pm    *La Belle at the Movies (67m) + Twaaga (30m)

Tuesday, May 10 (Francesca Beale Theater)
1:30pm    The Cursed Ones (95m)
3:45pm    Cuckold (95m)
6:00pm    Negritude: A Dialogue Between Wole Soyinka and Senghor (59m) – CLOSING NIGHT
7:45pm    *Shorts Program #2: Africa in New York (52m) – CLOSING NIGHT
9:30pm    Price of Love (99m)

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