CINEMA FROM ANGOLA,
CAPE VERDE, GUINEA BISSAU, MOZAMBIQUE
(Program of the
24th Festival of the 3 Continents, November 2002)
While Portuguese-speaking
African films are not totally unknown in France (two films by Flora
Gomes from Guinea-Bissau were released here and a third one is likely
to come out soon), the overwhelming majority of these films remains
to be discovered.
For historical
and political reasons, French-speaking African film-makers have had
more luck than their Portuguese-speaking colleagues in making and showing
their films.
The former Portuguese
colonies share a common film history closely linked to the late and
difficult decolonization: 1974 for Guinea-Bissau, 1975 for Angola, Cape
Verde Islands and Mozambique. With the exception of a few Angolan propaganda
documentaries made by the Independence fighters in the 1960s, Portuguese-speaking
African cinema is less than thirty-years old.
Developing in different
directions and with various degrees, it has depended on the new States'
initiatives to try and create film industries out of nothing.
Angola has the oldest
film industry. The first documentaries were made before Independence
and produced by the MPLA, one of the independence movements. Used as
a political tool, Angolan films are often, but not exclusively, documentaries.
Ruined by forty years of war, Angola has not been able to develop a
film industry, producing only one feature film and a few documentaries.
Despite extremely harsh conditions, two feature films are currently
being made.
The most prolific
country is Mozambique. Its politically motivated, mostly documentary
cinema has more than 400 films, among which are a few fiction films.
Cinema in Mozambique is currently going through a revival.
The most recent
film industry is Cape Verde's where the first feature film was made
in 1994 (Ilheu de contenda, Le‹o Lopes). Thanks to a stable political
situation, Cape Verde has been able to develop its own film industry
with Government support. A fascination for the tropics and the rich
local music, introduced in the Western countries by Cesaria Evora's
mornas, have brought about the making of many documentaries and feature
films, a remarkable fact for such a small country.
The most widely
recognized films are from Guinea-Bissau. In a country where practically
no film was made until the 1990s, two directors emerged whose films
have been seen around the world: Sana Na NÕhada and Flora Gomes in particular.
The local film industry greatly suffered from the 1998 coup. Today,
it is trying to set itself up again, despite difficulties arousing from
the regime's instability.
With this programme,
our aim is to retrieve these films from oblivion and show them to the
widest possible audience.
Alain Jalladeau