What’s Happing Today at the 30th Pan African Film and Arts Festival Friday, April 22

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Find the latest information on what to see, hear and do at the 30th Annual Pan African Film and Arts Festial

ARTFEST
10 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Plaza
3650 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.

FILM FESTIVAL
Today’s film screenings can be found here.

Senior Connections
Free screenings for seniors
Fri, April 22 @ 1:15p
The Cannons 

Location: Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Plaza 15 and XD

PANELS

Where Do We Go From Here: Chaos or Community
Thu, Apr 21-Sun, May 1

This digital panel discusses the context of entrenched institutional, structural and systemic racism, monopoly capitalism, sexism, gender identity, socialism, intersectionality, Pan Africanism, Mother Nature (COVID-19 and climate change).
Moderator: Journalist Jasmyne Cannick
Panelists: Ayuko Babu, Professor Angela Davis, Dr. Melina Abdullah, historian Dr. Gerald Horne
WATCH IT HERE

Earth Day: How You Can Help Protect Our Community from the Oil Field in Our Backyard

Fri, Apr 22 @ 4:30p
The Inglewood Oil Field, right here in Baldwin Hills, is the largest urban oil field in the US. More than a million people live within 5 miles of Inglewood Oil Field and it exposes residents to toxic chemicals, which can cause a vast amount of public health concerns like respiratory illness, cardiovascular disease and cancer. Learn about the impacts of oil fracking on our public health, especially in Black communities, and how you can help us transition to a better, cleaner, future for all.
Moderator: Josiah Edwards,  Sunrise Movement Los Angeles
Panelists: Damon Nagami, Senior Attorney and Director of NRDC’s Southern California Ecosystems Project, Veronica Flores, Chief Executive Officer at Community Health Councils, Holly J. Mitchell, Los Angeles County Supervisor 2nd District, David Haake, M.D., Chair of Clean Break Team, Angeles Chapter, Sierra Club, and Kaela Thomas from Black Women for Wellness.
Location: SSC Gallery, BHC 2nd level (#272)

Women Behind the Scenes
Fri, Apr 22 @ 6:00p
BIPOC women are working behind the scenes and bringing their POV, life experiences and talents to film and television projects. Learn from an all-female panel discussion about the importance of gender representation in the entertainment industry and why representation empowers and amplifies female voices for the culture.
Moderator: Dominique DiPrima, KBLA 1580AM Talk Radio
Panelists: Jessica Sarowitz (Founder, Miraflores Films & 4S Bay Partners), Areva Martin, Camille Tucker, Tina Farris
Location: PAFF Institute Lounge, Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Plaza, 1st level

AN ACT OF WORSHIP World Premiere at Tribeca Film Festival 2022

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Act of Worship photo1

Directors: Nausheen Dadabhoy
Producer: 
Sofian Khan, Kristi Jacobson, Heba Elorbany
Running Time: 1 hour 23 minutes
Language: English, Arabic
Country: U
nited States

PRESS SCREENING
Friday, June 10 at 9:30AM at Village East - Press/Industry Screening
PUBLIC SCREENING SCHEDULE
Thursday, June 9 at 5:00PM at Village East - WORLD PREMIERE
Friday, June 10 at 6:00PM at Cinepolis - 2nd Public Screening
Sunday, June 12 at 8:15PM at Tribeca Film Center - 3rd Public Screening

Photo 5-(L-R) Aber in Nausheen Dadabhoy's AN ACT OF WORSHIP (Photo Credit_ Capital K Pictures).
Photo 5-(L-R) Aber in Nausheen Dadabhoy's AN ACT OF WORSHIP (Photo Credit_ Capital K Pictures).

AN ACT OF WORSHIP is a polyphonic portrait of the last 30 years of Muslim life in America. Told through the lens of Muslims living in the United States, the film offers a counter-narrative of pivotal moments in U.S. history and explores the impact of anti-Muslim rhetoric and policy on young Muslims who came of age after 9/11. Due to their first-hand knowledge and intimate access to the Muslim community, the filmmaking team is able to take charge of the account, which has previously been shaped by outsiders.

ABER’s father was deported when she was 16. Now, she’s a community organizer leading a sanctuary city initiative in New York. KHADEGA is an 18-year-old Sudanese immigrant living in Michigan. While she feels compelled to advocate for her community, she struggles to overcome society's expectations of her and find her own way. AMEENA is a civil rights lawyer in California, but as a mother, she’s conflicted between caring for her three young children or sacrificing her time with them to fight for change.

(L-R) Aber and her mother in Nausheen Dadabhoy's AN ACT OF WORSHIP (Photo Credit_ Capital K Pictures)
(L-R) Aber and her mother in Nausheen Dadabhoy's AN ACT OF WORSHIP (Photo Credit_ Capital K Pictures)

Weaving together observational footage of these three women with community home videos, and evocative recollections from individuals impacted by incidents of Islamophobia, AN ACT OF WORSHIP opens a window into the world of Muslim Americans through collective memory.

NAUSHEEN DADABHOY, is a director and cinematographer whose work spans fiction and documentary. She lensed an Oscar nominated film, an Emmy winning documentary, and films that have played at Sundance, TIFF, Locarno and on Al Jazeera, HBO and PBS. Her directorial debut THE GROUND BENEATH THEIR FEET premiered at IDFA.

TRIBECA FILM FESTIVAL 2022
Link to buy tickets: https://tribecafilm.com/films/act-of-worship-2022 #Tribeca2022

PR CONTACT:
Emma Griffiths (EG-PR)
emma@eg-pr.com
www.eg-pr.com

It’s a Hit! The 30th Pan African Film and Arts Festival’s Opening Night Screening “Remember Me: The Mahalia Jackson Story”

Cast of "Remember Me: The Mahalia Jackson Story" at 30th Pan African Film Festival Opening Night. Photo: Pan African Film Festival
Cast of "Remember Me: The Mahalia Jackson Story" at 30th Pan African Film Festival Opening Night. Photo: Pan African Film Festival

The Stars shined bright last night as the Pan African Film and Arts Festival celebrated its 30th Anniversary with an in-person screening of “Remember Me: The Mahalia Jackson Story”, directed by Denise Dowe and written by Ericka Nicole Malone. Last night at the Director Guild of America on April 19th.

On the Red Carpet were the stars of the film GRAMMY® winning Ledisi as Mahalia Jackson,  Columbus Short as Martin Luther King Jr., Janet Hubert, Vanessa A. Williams, Wendy Raquel Robinson, Keith David, Corbin Bleu and Keith Robinson.

Ayuko Babu, Executive Director of Pan African Film Festival and actor Danny Glover, both co-founders. Photo: Pan African Film Festival
Ayuko Babu, Executive Director of Pan African Film Festival and actor Danny Glover, both co-founders. Photo: Pan African Film Festival

In attendance was the film’s writer Ericka Nicole Malone, who is also an executive producer and director Denise Dowse, who also shined bright.

The night was hosted by actor, activist and Pan African Film and Arts Festival co-founder Danny Glover and Executive Director and co-founder Ayuko Babu.

Proud sponsors of tonight’s 30th Pan African Film and Arts Festival are Stocker Street Creative, Glassdoor and FX Networks.

The 30th Pan African Film and Arts Festival will take place through May 1, 2022, at the Cinemark Theatre and in the Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Plaza.

Columbus Short starring as Martin Luther King Jr. in "Remember Me: The Mahalia Jackson Story" Opening Night Pan African Film Festival. Photo: Pan African Film Festival
Columbus Short starring as Martin Luther King Jr. in "Remember Me: The Mahalia Jackson Story" Opening Night Pan African Film Festival. Photo: Pan African Film Festival

REMEMBER ME is a poignant look into the life and rise of gospel singer Mahalia Jackson (Ledisi). Set in New Orleans, Louisiana, this provocative story explores the tumultuous relationship Mahalia shared with her mother’s sister “Aunt Duke” (Janet Hubert) legally named “Mahala” who was Mahalia’s namesake, after her mother Charity unexpectedly passes away. REMEMBER ME is a journey into Mahalia’s pursuit to go beyond the early childhood trauma she faced and detail how although her early childhood trauma shook her, it did not break her.  Mahalia was not only an iconic gospel singer breaking racial and gender barriers she was also a Civil rights activist who understood the power of her position in the movement. REMEMBER ME explores Mahalia’s unbreakable relationship with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. (Columbus Short) and her integral role in the Civil rights movement. REMEMBER ME brings Mahalia’s fight for freedom into the spotlight while highlighting Mahalia’s own personal search for love.

About the Pan African Film & Arts Festival  

Established in 1992 by Hollywood veterans Danny Glover (The Color Purple, Lethal Weapon), the late Ja'Net DuBois ("Good Times"), and Ayuko Babu (Executive Director), the Pan African Film Festival is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that has remained dedicated to the promotion of Black stories and images through the exhibition of film, visual art, and other creative expression. PAFF is one of the largest and most prestigious Black film festival in the U.S. and attracts local, national, and international audiences. In addition, it is an Oscar-qualifying festival for animation and live-action films, and one of the largest Black History Month events in America

The 30th Pan African Film & Arts Festival Announces Competition Selections

International Black Film Festival to Feature 55 World Premiere Titles

Ledisi and Columbus Short as Mahalia Jackson and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in Remember Me.
Ledisi and Columbus Short as Mahalia Jackson and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in Remember Me.

Today, the 30th Pan African Film & Arts Festival (PAFF) announced its film nominations in its prestigious juried competition. Forty-four films are included in six competitions this year.

This year’s film roster reflects the times we are in,” said PAFF General Manager Asantewe Olatunji. “Many focus on social justice issues such as gender equality, police and community relations, and the changing lifestyle norms. Of course, several of the PAFF 2022 films focus on our well-known and sometimes obscure sheroes and heroes whose stories told by their own people give a new perspective of history and view of our world.”

PAFF is the largest Black film festival in America taking place April 19 - May 1, 2022. This year the Festival will make its return to the Cinemark Baldwin Hills for in-person screenings, featuring over 200 films from 55 countries, in 18 languages, including 58 World and 32 North American premieres.  Of the films selected for the Festival, 46% are helmed by female, queer or non-binary filmmakers, and 80% are directed by filmmakers of African descent.  Many titles will also be available virtually for in-home screenings via the Festival’s streaming platform Eventive to audiences worldwide.  The Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Plaza will once again host its renowned Artfest, featuring over 100 established and emerging fine artists and quality craftspeople from all over the Black Diaspora.  

Check out PAFF’’s competing films by clicking the names of the titles below.

*Denotes films available for viewing through PAFF press screenings for credentialed media.

Best First Feature Narrative

A Brother’s Whisper*  (US)
Bantú Mama  (Dominican Republic)
Get Out Alive*  (US)
Juwaa* (Belgium)
Queen of Glory*  (US)
Remember Me: The Mahalia Jackson Story (US)

Best First Feature Documentary

Africa and I*  (South Africa)
Conversations: The Black Radical Tradition* (US)
Fanon (Algeria)
Subjects of Desire (Canada)
Broken Chains (Singapore)
The Rumba Kings (Peru)

Best Feature Narrative

 Ayinla (Nigeria)
Hairareb (Namibia)
Lingui, the Sacred Bonds (Chad)
Parsley (Dominican Republic)
Tug of War (Zanzibar)

Best Feature Documentary

African Redemption: The Life and Legacy of Marcus Garvey*  (US/Jamaica)
Buddy Guy: The Blues Chase the Blues Away* (US)
Grandpa Was an Emperor (US/Ethiopia)
Race Today (UK)
Why Is We Americans? (US)

Best Short Documentary

Cuba In Africa (US/Cuba)
David Dinkins: A Gorgeous Mosaic (US)
For Love and Legacy (US)
I Am More Than My Hair (US)
Jumping Into Fire (US)
Miss Panama (US/Panama)
There’s Your Ready Girl (US)

Best Short Narrative

Alone Together (US)
Astel (Senegal)
Break-up In Love (US)
Cracked (US)
Cupids (P&G Short) (US)
Famadihana - Reunion
Here (US)
Leaving Isiolo (Kenya)
Lock Off (UK)
Mass Avenue (US)
Pink & Blue (US)
Sins of the Father (US)
Slow Pulse (US)
Sungara (Kenya)
The Last Days (UK)

*Denotes films available for viewing through PAFF press screenings for credentialed media.

PAFF30 ASSETS
https://www.paff.org/pressroom/

MEDIA CONTACT
press@paff.org 

Festival Sponsors and Partners

PAFF is sponsored in part by the City of Los Angeles, the Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs, Los Angeles County Supervisor Holly J. Mitchell through the Department of Arts and Culture, LA Councilmember Marqueece Harris-Dawson, LA Councilmember Curren Price, LA Councilmember Herb Wesson, the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences, LA Arts COVID-19 Relief Fund with the California Community Foundation, and the LA County COVID-19 Arts Relief Fund administered by the LA County Department of Arts and Culture.

The 30th Pan African Film & Arts Festival's sponsors include Major Festival Sponsors: Stocker Street Creative, FX Networks, and Glassdoor.

About the Pan African Film Festival  

Established in 1992 by Hollywood veterans Danny Glover (The Color Purple, Lethal Weapon), the late Ja'Net DuBois ("Good Times"), and Ayuko Babu (Executive Director), the Pan African Film Festival is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that has remained dedicated to the promotion of Black stories and images through the exhibition of film, visual art, and other creative expression. PAFF is one of the largest and most prestigious Black film festival in the U.S. and attracts local, national, and international audiences. In addition, it is an Oscar qualifying festival for animation and live-action films, and one of the largest Black History Month events in America.   

THE PAN AFRICAN FILM & ARTS FESTIVAL PRESENTS ITS NEW ART PROGRAM, “ALL ARTISTS HAVE A SEAT AT THE TABLE,” SPONSORED BY IKEA  

World-Renowned Artists Have Transformed IKEA Dining Pieces into One-of-a-Kind Designs in Celebration of 30 Years of PAFF 

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The Pan African Film & Arts Festival (PAFF) is proud to present, “All Artists Have a Seat at the Table,” a new and innovative art program sponsored by IKEA in celebration of 30 Years of PAFF. Under the direction of PAFF's Art Director, Allohn Agbenya, five esteemed artists are contributing their creativity to revamp an IKEA dining set. The furniture has been transformed into individual pieces of art inspired by the theme: PAFF 30, PAFF Roots. The pieces were previously on display at four IKEA stores throughout Southern California and will be viewable at the Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Plaza, April 21 - May 1st.

Marc Brogdon, Marketing Director for PAFF stated, “One of my favorite African Proverbs says, ‘A tree’s beauty lies in its branches, but its strength lies in its roots.’ Utilizing our artists and IKEA wooden furniture to create powerful artwork is the perfect symbolism of our deep-rooted connection to the community.”

“All Artists Have a Seat at the Table,” is a celebration of PAFF and the artistry showcased over the years. For more than three decades, PAFF has united folks across the diaspora—creating an inspiring platform for the partnership with IKEA. “The dining table is the universal space for gathering, our sustainable and accessible furniture provided the perfect blank slate for the artists to illustrate PAFF’s rich legacy and commitment to bringing people together to share the Black experience.” Kevin Matthews, Regional Marketing Manager at IKEA U.S. shared. “As the leader in life at home, we want to celebrate the importance of home and the role it plays for the many. This work naturally demonstrates our core value of togetherness in a vibrant and unique way.”

“As a curator and art director, I selected artists for the IKEA Project whose works of art present an array of diasporic characteristics that borrow from the broad field that is our celebrated history & traditions,” said Allohn Agbenya, PAFF Art Director. “Africa and her global artistic roots and outreach have been influential on every continent. Rich in texture, proverbial wisdom, beauty, and evolutionary flow.”

Participating Artists:

  • Allohn Agbenya (PAFF Art Director)
    Allohn Agbenya is a contemporary artist whose roots celebrate the fibers and cultural pride of West Africa and beyond! Born in Ghana, Agbenya now resides in Los Angeles and is the Production Designer for PAFF as well as the Director/Curator for the ArtFest.
  • Sandra Zebi
    Sandra Zebi is an artist from Sao Paulo, Brazil and came to Los Angeles in 1986, intrigued and inspired by the cultural diversity that the city has to offer.
  • Marvin Obasogie Aimiuwu (MOA)
    MOA started drawing and painting as a child in Nigeria, studied fine art in college, and has pursued artwork full time since coming to the United States.
  • Aziz Diagne
    Aziz Diagne is a multi-media artist from Senegal, West Africa. He grew up amid the traditional art forms of his homeland including rock carving, ceramic and wood sculpture, murals, tapestry, and Thiesoise (reverse painting on glass).
  • Charles A. Bibbs
    A native son of Southern California, Charles Bibbs is an internationally acclaimed artist, entrepreneur, and philanthropist who has made a significant impact on contemporary arts.

The full program for the 30th annual Pan African Film and Arts Festival will take place in person and virtually, April 19 - May 1, in Los Angeles at its flagship venues the Directors Guild of America, Cinemark Baldwin Hills and XD and Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Plaza.

About IKEA
At IKEA, the vision is to create a better everyday life for the many people by offering well-designed, functional and affordable, high-quality home furnishing, produced with care for people and the environment. Ingka Group (Ingka Holding B.V. and its controlled entities) is one of 12 different groups of companies that own and operate IKEA retail under franchise agreements with Inter IKEA Systems B.V. Ingka Group has three business areas: IKEA Retail, Ingka Investments and Ingka Centres. Ingka Group is a strategic partner in the IKEA franchise system, operating 389 IKEA stores in 32 countries – including 52 retail locations in the U.S.

For more information on IKEA U.S., see IKEA-USA.com@IKEAUSANews@IKEAUSA or IKEAUSA on FacebookYouTubeInstagram and Pinterest.

About the Pan African Film & Arts Festival

Established in 1992 by Hollywood veterans Danny Glover (The Color Purple, Lethal Weapon), the late Ja'Net DuBois ("Good Times"), and Ayuko Babu (Executive Director), the Pan African Film Festival is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that has remained dedicated to the promotion of Black stories and images through the exhibition of film, visual art, and other creative expression. Every year, hundreds of filmmakers, fine artists, and unique craftspeople from more than 40 countries and six continents converge in Los Angeles to showcase their work. Annually, PAFF showcases more than 190 new high-quality Black films from the United States, Africa, the Caribbean, South America, Europe, the South Pacific, Canada and increasingly, Asia. Most importantly, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS) has designated PAFF as an official qualifying film festival for live action and animation short films.

PAFF is the largest and most prestigious Black film festival in the U.S. and attracts local, national, and international audiences. It is also one of America's largest Black History Month events.

For more information, please visit https://www.paff.org/seatatthetable

Find the Pan African Film Festival on: Twitter: https://twitter.com/paffnow
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/paffnow  Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/paffnow
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/ThePanAfricanFilmFestival

PAFF ANNOUNCES FULL LINEUP FOR 2022 PAN AFRICAN FILM & ARTS FESTIVAL

REMEMBER ME, THE MAHALIA JACKSON STORY Opens 30th Edition of America’s Largest Black Film Festival, Apri 19 - May 1

Over 200 films from 55 countries to be shown at Cinemark Baldwin Hills

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LOS ANGELES, California – Today, PAFF announced the full lineup for the 30th annual Pan African Film & Arts Film Festival, the largest Black film festival in America, taking place April 19 - May 1, 2022. This year the Festival will make its return to the Cinemark Baldwin Hills for in-person screenings, featuring over 200 films from 55 countries, in 18 languages, including 58 World and 32 North American premieres. Of the films selected for the Festival, 46% are helmed by female, queer or non-binary filmmakers, and 80% are directed by filmmakers of African descent. Many titles will also be available virtually for in-home screenings via the Festival’s streaming platform Eventive to audiences worldwide. The Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Plaza will once again host its renowned Artfest, featuring over 100 established and emerging fine artists and quality craftspeople from all over the Black Diaspora. Festival Passes and individual tickets are on sale now and can be purchased at www.paff.org.

BIG NIGHTS

The 30th Pan African Film & Arts Festival opens Apr. 19 at the Directors Guild of America with REMEMBER ME, a poignant look into the life and rise of gospel singer Mahalia Jackson and starring Grammy-winning singer Ledisi. The Centerpiece presentation are the winning films from the JOHN SINGLETON SHORT FILM COMPETITION. Inspired by the legacy of the late Los Angeles-born legendary African American filmmaker, John Singleton, the competition is the result of a partnership between the City of Los Angeles and PAFF under L.A. City Council President Herb Wesson’s embRACE L.A. initiative and is designed to honor Singleton’s cinematic legacy while simultaneously celebrating his unapologetic approach to filmmaking. The Festival will also host the premiere of FX Network’s hotly anticipated “Snowfall” Season 5 finale and Showtime’s “The Man Who Fell From Earth,” starring Chiwetel Ejiofo. The full schedule is available in the online Festival Program.

Click here to download PAFF's 2022 Quick Facts and Highlights

CELEBRATING 30 YEARS

7,200 miles away from Los Angeles in Ougadodo, Burkina Faso, the idea to showcase Black film and filmmakers in Los Angeles was born. It was 1989, the 20th anniversary of FESPACO also known as The Panafrican Film and Television Festival of Ouagadougou, the largest film festival in Africa. There, Ayuko Babu, Danny Glover (The Color Purple, Lethan Weapon), and others with the help of then-Chairman of the U.S. Subcommittee on Africa Rep. Mervyn Dymally and Burkina Faso President Blaise Compaoré conceived a plan to bring African cinema to the U.S. Thirty years later, the Pan African Film Festival (PAFF), is still going strong and is the largest Black film festival in America.

Ticketing

Festival Passes and individual tickets are on sale now and can be purchased at www.paff.org.

Festival Sponsors and Partners

PAFF is sponsored in part by the City of Los Angeles, the Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs, Los Angeles County Supervisor Holly J. Mitchell through the Department of Arts and Culture, LA Councilmember Marqueece Harris-Dawson, LA Councilmember Curren Price, LA Councilmember Herb Wesson, the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences, LA Arts COVID-19 Relief Fund with the California Community Foundation, and the LA County COVID-19 Arts Relief Fund administered by the LA County Department of Arts and Culture.

The 30th Pan African Film & Arts Festival's sponsors include major Festival sponsors: Stocker Street Creative, FX Networks, and Glassdoor.

About the Pan African Film & Arts Festival

Established in 1992 by Hollywood veterans Danny Glover (The Color Purple, Lethal Weapon), the late Ja'Net DuBois ("Good Times"), and Ayuko Babu (Executive Director), the Pan African Film Festival is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that has remained dedicated to the promotion of Black stories and images through the exhibition of film, visual art, and other creative expression. PAFF is one of the largest and most prestigious Black film festivals in the U.S. and attracts local, national, and international audiences. In addition, it is an Oscar-qualifying festival for animation and live-action films, and one of the largest Black History Month events in America.

For media inquiries please contact press@paff.org.

IN-PERSON
The 30th Annual Pan African Film & Arts Festival
April 19-May 1, 2022

Cinemark Baldwin Hills 15 | Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Plaza

List of Music Films Screening at 30th Pan African Film and Arts Festival

Check out the dynamic line-up of music films screening this year at the 3oth Pan African Film and Arts Festival 2022

PAFF_Anniversary_Medallion

Oscar Peterson: Black + White (Documentary, 83 min, Canada) Directed by Barry Avrich

This film explores the life and legacy of the great Afro-Canadian jazz icon and composer Oscar Peterson -- his sound, stardom, and staggering virtuosity. His family are among the people who fled or migrated to Canada from slavery and individual acts of racism or structural racism in the United States. This ground-breaking “docu-concert” delves into the seven-decade career of this jazz master from his days as a child prodigy in Canada to the development of his signature sound on recordings with his trio, and from collaborations with the legends of his era to his brilliant solo performances around the world — as well as his tenacious experiences confronting racism and segregation while touring the United States and the world, which culminated with his epic composition, Hymn to Freedom, inspired by Mr. Nelson Mandela and his peoples’ struggle for freedom and majority rule.

Buddy Guy: The Blues Chase the Blues Away (Documentary, 82 min, US) Directed by Charles Todd & Devin Amar

The story of Buddy Guy, who transcended his early years sharecropping in 1940s racist Louisiana to become one of music’s most influential guitarists, directly inspiring Taj Mahal, Johnny “Guitar” Watson, The Rolling Stones, Jimi Hendrix, and Eric Clapton. A tale of decades-long perseverance, Buddy’s journey reflects his peoples’ experiences in America through their music--the blues.

Love, Longing, Loss: At Home with Charles Lloyd During a Year of the Plague (Documentary, 60 min, US) Directed by Dorothy Darr

This film is about the amazing Charles Lloyd, one of the iconic jazz saxophonists of the 20th and 21st centuries, and the effects of the isolation due to the plague (COVID and its variants) which created a period of reflection, revelation and resourcefulness. Filmed over the course of several months using iPhone and Lumix cameras and a portable Zoom recorder, the film provides a rare and intimate insight into the artistry of Charles Lloyd--including his reflections on music, solitude, resistance, social injustice, his ancestry, as well as solo performances.

Tonton Manu (Documentary, 90 min, Brazil/Cameroon/Congo-Brazzaville/DRC/Côte d'Ivoire/France/Guadeloupe/UK/US) Directed by Patrick Puzenat & Thierry Dechilly (about the great Manu Dibango, who brought Soul Makossa to the world and influenced Michael Jackson’s album Thriller. Tonton means uncle in various African languages.)

This film, begun at the dawn of Manu’s eightieth birthday and completed five years later to the day, is a portrait of the great musician Manu Dibango, tireless defender of the mix of cultures that takes us to three continents. Rhythmic by a diversity of exchanges and the convictions of personalities, this sensitive and modest portrait is interspersed with moments of musical grace where the great Manu creates instances of pure emotion from his saxophone.

The Rumba Kings (Documentary, 94 min, Belgium/DRC/France/Morocco/Peru/US) Directed by Alan Brain

This wonderful film celebrates the great Pan African music that came out of the Democratic Republic of the Congoa nation that fought slavery and colonial oppression for its freedomThey forged a modern identity with the help of this music. In the 1950s, when the DRC was a Belgian colony, a generation of great Congolese musicians fused traditional African rhythms and music with Afro-Cuban rhythms and music to create the electrifying beat of a new Pan African sound called Congolese rumba. A beat that would carry Congo through its 1960s independence struggle and conquer Pan African nations and communities worldwide with its infectious groove, captivating guitar licks, and smooth vocals.

Remember Me: The Mahalia Jackson Story (Narrative Feature, 90 min, US) Directed by Denise Dowse

The Opening Night film celebrating the 30th Anniversary of the Pan African Film Festival on April 9@7:00 pm at the Directors Guild of America

An insightful look into the life and ascent of legendary, iconic, and mystic Gospel Singer Mahalia Jackson. This film focuses on her search to balance her gift, love, and her activism during the civil rights movement in the 1950s and 1960s. Mahalia broke racial, gender, business, and musical barriers and participated fully in the civil rights movement. She influenced such singers as Aretha Franklin, the Staple Singers, Nina Simone, and many others. She was an advisor to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and was his favorite singer. When Dr. King was depressed and feeling low, wherever he was in the world and no matter what time it was, he would call Mahalia and ask her to sing a song. As a civil rights activist she was conscious of her power in the movement, among the people and with Dr. King. An example of this mystical connection between her, the people and Dr. King is when Dr. King was giving the keynote speech at the 1963 March on Washington in front of 250,000 people at the Lincoln Memorial and millions of people watching on television worldwide. As he soared into his oratory, Mahalia can be heard saying “Martin, tell them about your dream.” He seamlessly soared into his dream which had an electrifying effect on the multitudes who were present and listening from around the world. The speech became the famous, iconic “I Have a Dream Speech,” considered one of the greatest speeches ever given. It is truly an honor for the Pan African Film Festival to have the opportunity to showcase this wonderful film about this iconic sister as the Opening Night film celebrating our 30th Anniversary on April 19@7:00 pm at the Directors Guild of America.

Ayinla (Narrative Feature, 119 min, Nigeria) Directed by Tunde Kelani

Set against the backdrop of a beautiful range of hills and valleys in the southwestern Nigerian countryside, AYINLA is inspired by the life and times of Ayinla Omowura, a popular Yoruba musician in rural Nigeria. Ayinla was the decisive proponent of the important music from the Yoruba people called Apala. As a result of his innovations, creativity, musicianship and spirituality, as well as his ability to speak to the conditions of the people, this music has spread around the world and has produced such superstars as Fela Aníkúlápó Kuti, Chief Sonny Ade, Hugh Masekela, Chief Ebenezer Obey, Bobby Benson, Nobel Prize winner Wole Soyinka, Femi Kuti, Seun Kuti, Tony Allen and many others. Apala music is so powerful that it can be heard somewhere on the planet Earth in various forms such as fuji music every day. The film captures the story of this musical superstar who comes to a tragic end as his stardom was ascending. Forty years after his death, his legacy and Apala music remains popular and relevant today. 

IMAGES OF A NORDIC DRAMA INTERNATIONAL PREMIERE at HOT DOCS 2022

Hot Docs 2022 Logo

Director: Nils Gaup
Producer: Linn Henriksen
Running Time: 1 hour 11 minutes
Language: English, German, Norwegian
Country:
Norway, Germany
Feature Documentary

The leading character Haakon Mehren in his tiny art-crowded apartment in Oslo. The leading character Haakon Mehren in his tiny art-crowded apartment in Oslo. The leading character Haakon Mehren in his tiny art-crowded apartment in Oslo. Photo: Paranord Film
The leading character Haakon Mehren in his tiny art-crowded apartment in Oslo. The leading character Haakon Mehren in his tiny art-crowded apartment in Oslo. The leading character Haakon Mehren in his tiny art-crowded apartment in Oslo. Photo: Paranord Film

HOT DOCS 2022 FESTIVAL SCREENINGS:
PUBLIC SCREENINGS
Saturday, April 30 at 11:30am
Location: Varsity 8 (55 Bloor Street West)
Thursday, May 5 at 8:45pm
Location: Varsity 8 (55 Bloor Street West)
*Also available for online festival access.

A persistent art collector (Haakon Mehren)  faces unexpected resistance while championing the work of an unknown Norwegian artist after finding a cache of paintings in a barn. Despite success abroad, the undiscovered work of Aksel Waldemar Johannessen, an admired contemporary of Edvard Munch, takes nearly three decades to launch. The painter's oil depictions of prostitutes and drunks living in miserable poverty offend the bourgeois aesthetics of Norway's art establishment and challenge the canon to the point of sabotaging his rediscovery. Will rejection by the curatorial staff at the National Museum and gatekeepers of the Munch Museum diminish Johannessen's work? An invaluable insight into art world politics, cultural institutions' ties to big business and the power of exposure, IMAGES OF A NORDIC DRAMA  shows Johannessen's pieces repetitively throughout the film, to the point of familiarity, to demonstrate how contact with works of art cultivate appreciation and memorability, and how essential access is to making or breaking an audience for an artist's oeuvre.

NILS GAUP was born in Kautokeino, Northern-Norway in 1955. Gaup is an award-winning screenwriter and director with over 30 years of experience from filmmaking. His first feature film PATHFINDER (1987) was nominated for an Academy Award.
Since then, he has made numerous feature films, with IMAGES OF A NORDIC DRAMA, being his first documentary.
HAOT DOCS 2022 Link to buy tickets:
https://hotdocs.ca/whats-on/hot-docs-festival/films/2022/images-of-a-nordic-drama

@hotdocs #HotDocs22

CONTINUING WITH ‘BEST OF PAFF’ CELEBRATION, PAN AFRICAN FILM & ARTS FESTIVAL TO CELEBRATE THE STORIES AND VOICES OF BLACK WOMEN IN FILM WITH SPECIAL VIRTUAL FILM SERIES MAR 10-23

PAFF in-person festival set for April
in Los Angeles

PAFF30_LOGO

LOS ANGELES - The Pan African Film & Arts Festival (PAFF), the largest Black film festival in America, will continue its yearlong 30th celebration in March with the second of several specially curated blocks of the festival’s most fascinating, complex, and most liked films over the past three decades.  The "Best of PAFF" Women’s History Month Film Series is a selection of films that is a celebration of the revolutionary work of international women filmmakers, actors, and stories of women of African descent speaking with their voice in a male-dominated field.  From the US to Jamaica, Puerto Rico, Cuba, Mexico, and Africa, PAFF will showcase the diverse stories of Black women throughout the African diaspora.  The film series will take place virtually Mar. 10-23, 2022.  Film listings, tickets, and passes are available at paff.org.

In addition, the 30th annual Pan African Film and Arts Festival is slated to take place April 19-May 1 after being postponed due to the rise of COVID cases in Los Angeles County. The in-person festival will take place in  Los Angeles at its flagship venues the Directors Guild of America, Cinemark Baldwin Hills and XD and Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Plaza.

The Pan African Film & Arts Festival is sponsored in part by the City of Los Angeles, the Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs, Los Angeles County Supervisor Holly J. Mitchell through the Department of Arts and Culture, Los Angeles City Councilmember Marqueece Harris-Dawson (8th District), Los Angeles City Councilmember Curren Price (9th District), Los Angeles’ 10th Council District, the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences, LA Arts COVID-19 Relief Fund with the California Community Foundation, and the LA County COVID-19 Arts Relief Fund administered by the LA County Department of Arts and Culture.

 

Below are the films featured in the virtual "Best of PAFF" Women’s History Month Film Series Mar. 10-23, 2022.

FEATURES

Angelica (Puerto Rico/Narrative/100min/2017)
Director: Marisol Gomez-Mouakad

After a long absence from Puerto Rico, Angelica returns home when her father, Wilfredo, suffers a stroke. This unexpected return and her father's illness force Angelica to re-evaluate her relationship with her mother and family members who don't accept her because of her skin color. She must face herself and discovers that she does not know who she is. A psychological drama that illustrates how discrimination affects family and other relationships.

Awards: Honorable Mention at NYLFF 2017

Barrow - Freedom Fighter (Barbados/Documentary/84min/2016)
Director: Marcia Weekes

The passionate docu-drama illuminating the courage of one man who relentlessly preached a gospel of economic self-reliance and self-respect to the people of his native country, Barbados, and beyond. He defied the status quo, confronted racism and classicism, fought colonial oppression and selflessly led his people to political and economic freedom. A hero lives for the other...that was The Right Excellent Errol Walton Barrow, Father of Independence, Reformer, National Hero of Barbados.

Awards: Best Diaspora Documentary, Africa Movie Academy Award, 2018; Programmers’ Award-Documentary, PAFF 2018

Civil Brand* (US/Narrative/95min/2002)
Director: Neema Barnette

When a beautiful young nurse and mother is incarcerated for killing her abusive husband, she doesn't realize that she has just become a newly initiated working member of one of the most profitable businesses in America--the prison industrial complex.

Awards: Best Film, American Black Film Festival, 2002; Audience Award and Special Jury Prize, Urbanworld, 2002; Festival Prize, PAFF 2003

Dry (Nigeria/Narrative/106min/2015)
Director: Stephanie Linus

An African doctor living in Wales avoids visiting her homeland because of a trauma suffered in childhood. When her missionary mother falls ill, she reluctantly agrees to return home to take her place. On the trip, Zara learns to face her past while helping other young woman from suffering her same trauma. Stars Stephanie Okereke.

Awards: Programmers' Award-Narrative Feature, PAFF 2016; AMAA 2016-Rivers State Govenment Endowed Award-Best Nigerian Film; Best Protagonist -Bentonville Film Festival; Best Supporting Actress- Zafaa Awards; Best Producer-Zafaa Awards

Elza (Guadeloupe/France/Narrative/80min/2011)
Director: Mariette Monpierre

A young Parisian woman of Caribbean descent returns to her native island of Guadeloupe looking for the father she has never known. Stunning visuals and an incredible soundtrack makes this a beauty, not to be missed!

Awards: Programmer's Narrative Award &  Special Jury Recognition, PAFF 2012; PAFF/BAFTA-LA Award, 2012

Everything But a Man (US/Narrative/110min/2016)
Director: Nnegest Likké

A career-focused woman with no time for love finds unexpected romance with a Black man from another culture, but their radical lifestyle differences threaten to shake up her world and challenge her beliefs about love, relationships and what it means to be a "strong" woman. Race, class, gender and culture all clash in this unconventional romantic comedy-drama. Stars Jimmy Jean-Louis.

Awards: Audience Award- Narrative Feature, PAFF 2017

Kingston Paradise (Jamaica/Narrative/83min/2013)
Director: Mary Wells

A small-time hustler driven by poverty gets caught up in a life of petty crime while his lady-friend dreams for peace depicted in a painting, This off beat urban thriller unfolds the couple’s struggle to survive the chaos of their broken dreams and aspirations finally culminating in an act of reckless despiration that will change their lives forever.

Awards: Best Feature Narrative for the Diaspora, AMAA, 2014; Audience Award, Best Feature-Caribbean Tales Film Festival

Liyana (Swaziland/US/Qatar/Documentary/77min/2017)
Director: Amanda Kopp & Aaron Kopp

A Swazi girl embarks on a dangerous quest to rescue her young twin brothers. This animated African tale is born in the imaginations of five orphaned children in Swaziland who collaborate to tell a story of perseverance drawn from their darkest memories and brightest dreams. Their fictional character’s journey is interwoven with poetic and observational documentary scenes to create a genre-defying celebration of collective storytelling.

Awards: Grand Jury Award Best Documentary - LA Film Festival; Jury Award for Artistic Bravery - Durban International Film Festival

Mary Lou Williams: The Lady Who Swings the Band (US/Documentary/70min/2014)
Director: Carol  Bash

The amazing Mary Lou Williams was a genius--ahead of her time. During an era when Jazz was the nation's popular music, Williams was one of its greatest innovators. As both a pianist and composer, she was a wellspring of creativity who helped shape the sound of the 20th century. But away from the piano, Williams was a woman in a "man's world," a Black person in a "whites only" society, an ambitious artist who dared to be different. Narrated by Alfre Woodard.

Awards: Programmers’ Award-Documentary, PAFF 2015

Neshoba: The Price of Freedom (US/Documentary/90min/2008)
Director: Micki Dickoff & Tony Pagano

For 40 years after the murder of civil rights workers James Chaney, Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwerner nobody was held accountable. That was until 2005 when the state of Mississippi indicted Preacher Edgar Ray Killien. This documentary takes you inside the courtroom and reveals the truth behind this infamous crime which defined a generation. Told with spellbinding precision, this film should be seen by all who remember in hopes we never forget.

Awards: Best Documentary, Boston Film Festival, 2008; Best Directors and Best Political Film, New York Int'l Independent Film Festival, 2008; Best Documentary Feature Nominee, PAFF 2010; Audience Award, Black Harvest Film Festival, 2010

Play the Devil (Trinidad & Tobago/Bahamas/Narrative/92min/2016)
Director: Maria Govan

Set against the backdrop of Trinidad and Tobago’s mystical Carnival, the film follows the push-pull between 18-year-old Gregory, a gifted and struggling student, and the glamorously wealthy businessman James, who dutifully carries on the lucrative family business while remaining in a loveless marriage. The two men strike an uncanny friendship as James takes Greg under his wing, pushing him to discover himself professionally, creatively, and intimately. Confused, Greg must at once deal with the return of his drug-addicted father and navigate through the early days of adulthood. As Carnival Monday approaches and the locals prepare for the annual male initiation parade, Greg must confront James - an act which will culminate in life-changing events.

Awards: Best Feature Nominee, PAFF 2018

PUSHOUT: The Criminalization of Black Girls in Schools (US/Documentary/76min/2019)
Director: Jacoba Atlas

Alarmingly, African American girls are the fastest-growing population in the criminal justice system and the only group of girls to disproportionately experience criminalization at every education level. PUSHOUT underscores the challenges Black girls face with insights from experts across the country who have worked extensively in the field of social justice, gender equality and educational equity, giving context to the crisis and providing a roadmap for how our educational system and those who interact with Black girls can provide a positive rather than punitive response to behaviors that are often misunderstood or misrepresented.

Awards: Jury Honorable Mention - Best Documentary, PAFF 2020

Shaina (Zimbabwe, South Africa/Narrative/97min/2020)
Director: Beautie Masvaure Alt

Shaina (Shine) is a teenager who has a knack for making something out of nothing and could have a promising future as an engineer, except for the fact that she doesn’t believe in herself. When she and her best friends are faced with a host of grown-up problems – loss of loved ones, unpaid exam fees and the curse of “blessers” – they come close to giving up. Their story is one of forgiveness and friendship, of creating a new family from the people who love you, and of the very real girl power.

Shoot the Messenger (Nigeria/UK/Narrative/100min/2006)
Director: Ngozi Onwurah

A Black teacher is falsely accused of assaulting one of his Black pupils. He loses his job and his sanity as the Black community brands him a racist. Destitute, he must confront his fear and hatred of his own community to reclaim his life. A highly provocative comedy about one Black man's feelings on being Black. Shocking, disturbing and funny, the spotlight is thrown on racial views and attitudes in a way that is anything but "politically correct!" Stars David Oyelowo (Selma).

Awards: Jury Favorite Award, PAFF 2007

 

AFRICAN AMERICAN SHORTS SERIES 1 

First Day Back (US/Narrative/21min/2019)
Director: Deshawn L Plair

It’s the first day back at school for the faculty and students of Lincoln High School in Philadelphia, after a fight between two students from rival neighborhoods resulted in the death of a fellow student, left others injured and changed the community forever. On this first day back, everyone struggles to adjust to the new normal – metal detectors, clear backpacks, and security escorts – with arguments erupting among teachers on the best way to protect the students and themselves. Superintendent Greene, a straight-laced administrator concerned about the district’s image and anxious for positive press, allows a local news crew to film the first day back, much to the dismay of the school’s leader, Principal Wallace. Focused on showing the school in the best light, she avoids problem areas, arranges interviews with top students and pushes for a moment with resident hero, Mr. Harris, the teacher who attempted to break up the fatal argument and was injured in the process. But both the news crew and Superintendent Greene get much more than they bargained for when tempers flare and students reveal how they truly feel about the violence and their new way of life.

Lalo's House (US/Narrative/26min/2017)
Director: Kelley Kali

Inspired by true events, LALO’S HOUSE follows the relentless courage of Manouchka, a 14-year-old Haitian girl, and her 5-year-old sister, Phara, who are abducted and thrown into an underground prostitution network that is posing as a Catholic orphanage. Forced to grow up prematurely, Manouchka must fight to save Phara and escape the fraudulent nun, Sister Francine, who holds them captive.

Awards: Programmers' Award, PAFF, 2018; Director's Guild of America Student Director Award, 2018; Best Narrative Short - KCET Fine Cut, 2019; Shadow and Act Rising Star Award, 2019

Quiet Denial (US/Narrative/16min/2018)
Director: Zuri Alexander

An African-American woman deals with degrading remarks and insults while auditioning to study classical piano with a world-renowned concert pianist.

Awards: Audience Award, L.A. Shorts, 2018; Silver Award, International Independent Film Awards, 2018; Award of Recognition, Best Shorts Competition, 2018

The Power Of Hope (US/Narrative/8min/2020)
Director: Kalia Love Jones

When her mother falls ill, an aspiring architect grapples with feelings of helplessness, but moved by the words of Michelle Obama, she finds the will to persevere and bring her dreams to life.

Awards: Youth Visionary Award, PAFF 2021

Treeline Lake (US/Narrative/25min/2019)
Director: Sinah Ober

A military trauma surgeon and his twenty-something son take the ashes of their deceased wife and mother to Treeline Lake, a place she loved. Against his father's wishes, the son creates a podcast about the experience that he hopes will advance his career as a radio journalist. This is the story of their last trip as a family.

Awards: Best Short Film, Katra Film Series, 2022

 

AFRICAN AMERICAN SHORTS SERIES 2 

#WhereIsBeauty (US/Narrative/11min/2016)
Director: Angela McCrae

A beautifully raw visual depiction of a woman during intimate moments of self-reflection and self-discovery. Frustrated by homogeneous selfies and false depictions of beauty, she searches for beauty in its most raw and natural form and captures the experience with her mobile phone. Inspiration turns into transformation when Nina meets Lea, her latest muse, creating the final chapter in her voyage to self-discovery.

Afro (US/Narrative/11min/2020)
Director: Jenn Shaw

Marissa Leah, a Black math whiz, is bullied for not being "Black enough” and only hanging out with her white best friend Zoe Romano. None of the other students support her math ambitions and she's fed up with people who don't understand her interests. After multiple encounters with a bully and a little academic inspiration, she finally stands up for herself against classmates that question her cultural identity and experiences a rite of passage for most girls…an #Afromation.

Covered (US/Narrative/16min/2017)
Director: Desha Dauchan

A married Muslim woman in crisis becomes obsessed with 'what' is buried in her disheveled backyard only to discover that it's not 'what' but 'who.' Tonight, at her breaking point she and her husband will dig it all up before day breaks.

Awards: Best Inspiration Film - IBFF Nashville

Glimpse (US/Narrative/6min/2018)
Director: Peres Owino

Inspired by true events, Ernest, an elderly gentleman with early onset Alzheimer's, sits on the bed dazed and confused as he listens to a series of voicemails from his wife Bertha that slowly reveal her tragic death. By reflecting on the nine victims of the Mother Emanuel AME Church shooting, Glimpse is a meditation on sudden death seen through the eyes of those left behind.

January 14th (US/Narrative/15min/2019)
Director: La'Chris Jordan

A young couple’s anniversary takes a bittersweet turn when a police officer pulls the husband over on a questionable traffic stop. Inspired by true events.

Awards: Best Short, 2019 Top Indie Awards; Best Director, 2019 Top Indie Awards

Nirvana, Love & Alcohol (US/Narrative/12min/2019)
Director: Keisha M. Ansley

Two strangers connect the morning after a wild night out that only one of them can remember.

War Paint (US/Narrative/16min/2018)
Director: Katrelle N. Kindred

Kiyanna, a bright yet reserved teenager, experiences the complexities of being both black and female on the eve of a 4th of July celebration in South Los Angeles.

 

PAN AFRICAN SHORTS SERIES 

Antivirus (Greece/Narrative/15min/2020)
Director: Anastasia Sima

Athens, Greece 2020. Quarantine days. Daphne, a young singer, decides to break down the wall that separates her from her annoying neighbor.

Awards: Audience Award National Competition – 43d Drama International Short Film Festival 2020

Kyenvu (Yellow) (Uganda/Narrative/20min/2017)
Director: Kemiyondo Coutinho

An independent, feminist woman meets a man on a transport. Though he challenges her ideals, he eventually wins her over through a series of hilarious events - only for their budding love to be tested.

Awards: Best Narrative Short, PAFF 2018

On Monday of Last Week (Ghana, US/Narrative/15min/2017)
Director: Akosua Adoma Owusu

A story by acclaimed Nigerian writer Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie provides the basis for this exploration of race, liberalism, and sexuality centered on an encounter between a Nigerian woman and the African American artist who employs her as a nanny.A story by acclaimed Nigerian writer Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie provides the basis for this exploration of race, liberalism, and sexuality centered on an encounter between a Nigerian woman and the African American artist who employs her as a nanny.

Awards: Best Short Film Nomination, AMAA, 2017

The Airport Run (US/Narrative/22min/2018)
Director: Eliana Ujueta

When first-time offender Elijah is released from prison, his grandmother wants him to go to college. But he wants to make money and gets a job as a driver with a cab company that runs a heist business on the side. All he has to do is text his boss if he determines that the passenger is going out of town.

Awards: Best Director, Best Cinematography, Seattle Film Festival, 2019

The Award Ceremony (South Africa/Narrative/8min/2019)
Director: Mmabatho Montsho

Princess Mahakwe prepares herself for her primary school’s prestigious awards ceremony, where she will be receiving top honors. Princess’ worst nightmare is walking across the stage in front of the whole school in her weathered and broken school shoes. She is confident, however, that her grandmother, Thandi, will meet her at the school gates with a brand-new pair of school shoes just in time for the ceremony. However, Thandi, a factory worker, is on the other side of town managing a crisis. She has not received her wages in weeks and has not yet bought the school shoes.

Awards: Best Short Film, Worldwide Women’s Film Festival, 2020

Zenith (US/Narrative/15min/2017)
Director: Ellie Foumbi

When an adopted Black Mennonite has an unexpected connection with a migrant worker, she is torn between her faith and her desire to explore the outside world.

Awards: IFP Audience Award, Columbia University Film Festival; Best Student Director, Black Star International Film Festival, 2017

 

PAN AFRICAN SHORTS SERIES 

77 Days (Canada/Narrative/14min/2016)
Director: Shailene Garnett

After another stint in rehab, a young absentee mother is finally determined to put her life together. She is faced with the challenges of mending the fragile pieces of her damaged relationships with her sisters to get her son back.

Family Tree (Uganda/Narrative/17min/2019)
Director: Nicole Magabo

It’s 1998 in Jinja, Uganda. Eight-year-old Nagawa seems to have an idyllic childhood, until a disastrous accident leaves her famous father fighting for his life. Nagawa and her mother arrive at the hospital to keep vigil. The private ward starts to fill up. Second after second, Nagawa realizes her family is much bigger than she thought.

Fruitful Emission (South Africa/Narrative/23min/2020)
Director: Mishqah Parthiephal

Nothing Imaan does is good enough her for mother-in-law. Imaan and her husband Rashid are continually pressured by Suraya to have a child. After persuading her child-loathing husband to father her a child, she finds out that he’s been keeping a dark secret.

Awards: Rapid Lion Film Festival  Johannesburg, South Africa, 2020

Good Kidd (US/Narrative/15min/2018)
Director: Jamari  Perry

Justin is a smart but troubled kid caught between who the people around him think he should be and who he actually is. Defining what  manhood is as he navigates through the harsh realities of the streets of Oakland California, Justin meets his defining moment head on when he is forced to choose between retaliation or walking away in the ultimate choice between manhood and childhood.

Awards: First Place, San Francisco Black Film Festival Best of the Bay; First Place, San Francisco Black Film Festival Films for Youth

Still Harlem (US/Narrative/18min/2018)
Director: Lynn Dow

Becky left the Midwest to get away from a life that, following her father’s death, had become dreary and monotonous. We meet her just as she arrives on the doorsteps of Dylan’s building. Serendipitously, she moves into the spare bedroom of Dylan’s apartment in which his grandfather had lived since the Harlem Renaissance. Together, Becky and Dylan learn to move on from the pain of loss and embrace a new life.

 

SHORT DOC SERIES

Brooks People (US/Documentary/23min/2017)
Director: Shahari Moore

“Brooks People” explores the life, the legacy and the impact of Gwendolyn Brooks, the first Black person to win a Pulitzer Prize. This short documentary will feature Dr. Cornell West, Nikki Giovanni, Dr. Haki Madhubuti, Joyce Owens, H.A.G.L. and of course Nora Brooks Blakely, the daughter of Gwendolyn Brooks. Rare footage of Brooks from 1966 and footage featuring Talib Kweli, Common, Kanye West, and commentary from his mother and Brooks’ colleague Dr. Donda West will also be included. Additional footage includes Ruby Dee reading Brooks’ poem on Emmett Till. Modern and vintage media skillfully weave the story of a Black woman, who came from humble beginnings to rise to iconic status. Brooks was outspoken and unflinching in her critique of Black life and race relations, and she has impacted many generations of writers, poets, and artists. Careful attention is paid to the current relevance of Brooks’ work by looking at the connection between historic efforts to gain civil rights and modern movements to sustain those rights, like Black Lives Matter.

Awards: Opening Night Selection Black Harvest Film Festival

Dare to Dream: Cuba's Latin American Medical School (Cuba, US/Documentary/30min/2017)
Director: Jennifer Wager

Cuba's Latin American Medical School is the largest medical school in the world, training nearly 30,000 doctors since 1999. ELAM as it is known in Spanish, also trains doctors from the United States. Follow the amazing adventure of American doctors trained in Cuba as they return home to the US to serve communities struggling with a health crisis in this inspirational film.

Awards: Best Director, Reel Festival, Texas; Audience Choice, Best Documentary, Tolpuddle Festival, England

Secrets of the Hollow: Last Disintegrated School (US/Documentary/29min/2019)
Director: Alicia M. Crowe

Last Disintegrated School tells the story of the journey of Thurgood Marshall and the Hillburn striking families’ fight for equal education at Brook School, the last segregated school in New York State to be closed in 1943.

Awards: Jurors Choice Award, Women of African Descent Film Festival

The Gathering (US/Documentary/24min/2016)
Director: Micki Dickoff

Witness to Innocence is the only organization of exonerated death row survivors in the United States. These innocent men and women, some having spent decades on death row for murders they didn’t commit, come together once a year to share their thoughts and feelings, fears and dreams with the only people who really understand what they experienced. Their stories are heartbreaking, shocking and anger-provoking. The exonerees empower each other, speaking out about a broken justice system that makes mistakes and compels them to be warriors against the death penalty. A diverse group of 16 death row survivors are passionate about telling their stories. They are men and women; Black, white and Latino; liberal and conservative. They bare their souls, forever changed by the degradation they suffered. They want the system changed so a competent defense doesn’t depend on money and racial bias is eliminated. They want dishonest prosecutors, police and judges held accountable. They want compensation for the years lost. They want their dignity restored. They want to end the death penalty. They know the risk of executing an innocent person is too high.

Awards: Best Short Documentary, Fort Lauderdale Int'l Film Festival; Award of Merit, Best Shorts Competition, Special Jury Award, Worldfest Houston; Best Film, Black Int'l Cinema Berlin; Award of Merit, Impact DOCS Awards; Silver Jury Prize, Social Justice Film Festival

 

SHORT DOC SERIES

Los Angeles: Displacement in Utopia (US/Documentary/20min/2018)
Director: Keith Rice, Karin Stanford, Pilar de Haro

An exploration of the history of housing discrimination and segregation in Los Angeles and its impact on African Americans. Using interviews, video footage, and photographs, the documentary examines African American migration and settlement as well as the triumphs and hardships experienced as they sought to overcome systemic/institutional racist exclusionary practices in the new “Utopia.” Throughout the film, the audience will witness African Americans' creative use of legal strategies to fight restrictive covenants, enlistment of proxy buyers, and establishment of real estate institutions to support their efforts to purchase real property and land. The film also connects the historical battle for housing to gentrification in contemporary Los Angeles and its impact on African Americans living in the inner city. “Los Angeles: Displacement in Utopia” features Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley, attorney Loren Miller, actress Hattie McDaniel, singer Nat “King” Cole and others who were significant in the battle for fair and equal housing in L.A.

Soft Hair (Sorf Hair) (Trinidad & Tobago/Documentary/24min/2017)
Director: Shari Perri

Sorf Hair explores the natural hair experience in Trinidad and Tobago as several people from different walks of life with different hair textures unearth their stories, challenges and give their point of view on how and why naturals are treated the way they are in this country.

The Last Mambo (Cuba, US/Narrative/56min/2019)
Director: Rita Hargrave & Reginald D. Brown

An  exploration of the unique heritage of the San Francisco Bay Area’s Salsa and Latin Jazz community, "The Last Mambo" uncovers how this collective of musicians, dancers and D.J.s have both created innovative approaches to Afro-Cuban based music and promoted social integration, cultural preservation and music education. Mambo"unfolds through in-depth interviews with key informants and additional commentary provided by Wayne Wallace (educator, trombonist), Herman Bossett (dancer, community historian), John Santos (educator,Percussionist), Rebeca Mauleon (educator, pianist)and Jesse “Chuy” Varela (music historian). Current and archival photographs and concert footage provide authenticity and context to the history of this diverse artistic community.

Black or Latina (US/Narrative/15min/2019)
Director: Karent Hinestroza

Colombian actress Zahinabu is finally having her first audition in New York for a Latina role. It could be the opportunity that she has been waiting for since she arrived in the US. But the audition takes a different direction when the casting group needs to consider the great audition from this Latina woman who doesn’t look like “Latina,” an experience that forces Zahinabu to understand where she really belongs.

Caliginosity (US/Narrative/22min/2016)
Director: Katrelle Kindred

Caliginosity explores how senseless gun violence effects a married couple, living in South Los Angeles. Marie and Victor’s loving family is shattered to pieces when their only son, Khalil is gunned down at a birthday party.

Havana (US/Narrative/12min/2019)
Director: Faith Strongheart

Havana, 1970s. Antonio, an immigration officer by day, sells exit visas illegally by night at exorbitant prices. Antonio’s secrets go beyond his secret job, though: he is also hiding his homosexuality, which comes to light when his lover, Jian, comes in looking for an exit visa for himself.

Learning to Swim (Jamaica/Narrative/28min/2018)
Director: Krystal Dawkins

Learning to Swim chronicles the story of Nordia, a deeply religious young Jamaican woman, who is faced with the task of co-parenting with her childhood sweetheart Everton, a man with whom she is still in love. Through seeing them come of age, we are taken into how they came together, what drove them apart and how they have had to learn to tread the complex waters of intolerance, poverty and religious fervor that color Jamaican life.

The Long Road Home (Zambia, US/Narrative/22min/2020)
Director: Kasuba Mukuka

The story of a young Zambian woman, Chanda, whose life is turned upside down after her Prince Charming, Henry, becomes severely abusive in their marriage. Her friends and family encourage her to endure in the marriage but once she hits rock bottom, she has to make a difficult choice to escape her tyrannical husband without help from her community.

 

SHORTS SERIES 2

Honeymoon (Mexico/Narrative/15min/2019)
Director: Amy Aniobi

The story of a newlywed couple on their first night together, made all the more awkward, romantic and honest, because they only just met.

Awards: Lionsgate/Starz Short Film Award, BlackStar Film Festival; Best Screenplay), Outstanding Cinematography, Micheaux International Film Festival, 2020; Best Actress, Tayo Elesin, Best Score, James Perry, Abuja International Film Festival

Junior (US/Narrative/28min/2017)
Director: Pearl Gluck

A mother struggles with a new normal after her teenage son is murdered by an off-duty police officer.

Awards: Best Actress, Bronze Lens Film Festival; Honorable Mention Award, San Francisco Black Film Festival; Jurors Choice Award, Women of African Descent Film Festival; Best Social Action Film, MOM Film Festival, 2020

Sisters (US/Narrative/13min/2019)
Director: Edrei Hutson

Two sisters check on their younger sister when she cancels their monthly brunch. They eventually learn that the younger sister is in an abusive relationship. In order to keep history from repeating itself, the eldest sister will have to reveal one of her deepest secrets.

Awards: Best Original Screenplay, Culture and Diversity Film Festival, 2020

Unspoken* (Jamaica/Narrative/12min/2018)
Director: Danae Grandison

In the hills of Kingston on a hot summer night, Caroline, who is 8 months pregnant, learns something very unsettling about her husband. He is sleeping with their helper and she feels betrayed by both of them.

Awards: NYWIFT Most Outstanding Female Content Creator, Katra Series, 2020; Best Short Katra Film Series, 2019

Yemi's Dilemma (US/Narrative/25min/2017)
Director: Sade Oyinade

Yemi’s Dilemma is the story of three sisters, a wedding and a family torn apart. Yemi, Lola and Tayo are first-generation Nigerian-Americans in a tight-knit family. Although they've been raised in America, their parents have a strong desire to maintain the traditions of their home country. Yemi, the eldest, is expected to marry a Nigerian man, but she’s keeping a huge secret from her parents that will forever change the dynamic within the family for better and for worse.

Awards: Best Narrative Film/Video, Black International Cinema, Berlin

 

SHORTS SERIES 3 

Grace (US/Narrative/16min/2017)
Director: Eboni Adams

Grace, a single, 30-something, ESL teacher is forced to return home after her mothers passing. She returns home to a frustrated sister who has bared the responsibly of taking care of their parents for years.  Now that Grace has returned home her younger sister who has a family of her own has decided to hand over the duties.  On this particular day, we go on a journey with Grace as she struggles between taking care of her father who suffers from early onset dementia or missing out on a job opportunity that could rekindle her love of teaching.  Although she's been a teacher for many years Grace becomes a student when she taught a valuable lesson from an unlikely person.

Awards: Best Short, Houston Black Film Festival, 2018; 3rd Place Best Short Film, Capital City Black Film Festival, 2018

Junebug (US/Narrative/18min/2019)
Director: Winter Dunn

At 28, Junie is a writer obsessed with capturing the essence of her childhood growing up with her musician father, Davis. Davis, an alcoholic drummer with an infectious charm and an unending tenderness for his daughter is proving difficult to put into words. As Junie struggles to articulate Davis in her writing and to her boyfriend Calvin, she’s transported back in time through her own memories of him. How do you explain someone impossible to love and impossible not to?

Take My Heart (US/Narrative/18min/2020)
Director: Anna Simone Scott

Mackenzie, a talented singer and songwriter, reconnects with her father, Ray, when he hears her sing for the first time after years of separation. The opportunity to resolve their past differences is almost upended when Mac's ex-boyfriend, Fox, appears on the scene.

Awards: Daytime Emmy Nomination Outstanding Daytime Fiction Program, 2021

The Deliberate Death of My Father (Canada/Narrative/13min/2020)
Director: Rose Katché Duez

Zoey enters a hair salon to dye her hair for the first time. As she questions her decision she replays her recent graduation dinner where an explosive fight becomes a chance to settle an old score. Will changing her hair be a final defiance or the first act of something more meaningful?

The Hyers Sisters' Dream & Legacy (US/Documentary/33min/2019)
Director: Susheel Bibbs

In the 1870s, when minstrels in Black-face ridiculed African-Americans across the land, Anna and Emma Hyers were the first female African-American touring-opera stars. At the height of their operatic acclaim, the Hyers decided to stand up for the dignity of their people, left their dream of operatic stardom and opened American Music Theater to integrated casts & Black leading players.. With their musicals focused on Black dignity and quests for freedom, they toured to audiences across the country. The Hyers Sisters have remained unsung -- until now.

Awards: Telly Award 2018

 

About the Pan African Film & Arts Festival  

Established in 1992 by Hollywood veterans Danny Glover (The Color Purple, Lethal Weapon), the late Ja'Net DuBois ("Good Times"), and Ayuko Babu (Executive Director), the Pan African Film Festival is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that has remained dedicated to the promotion of Black stories and images through the exhibition of film, visual art, and other creative expression. PAFF is one of the largest and most prestigious Black film festival in the U.S. and attracts local, national, and international audiences. In addition, it is an Oscar-qualifying festival for animation and live-action films, and one of the largest Black History Month events in America.

For media inquiries please contact press@paff.org.

 

30 Years of the Pan African Film and Arts Festival

PAFF 30th Logo

30 YEARS OF PAFF is a yearlong celebration of the Pan African Film & Arts Festival in 2022

Take a look back at The African Film & Arts Festival in pictures .

A special BEST OF PAFF RETROSPECTIVE
SERIES VIRTUAL FESTIVAL will be held FEB.
15-28 for Black History Month highlighting PAFF’s
most popular films over the past 30 years. Films will
be available on-demand.

Film listings, tickets, and pass information are at
paff.org

PAFF was founded in 1992 by award-winning actor
Danny Glover (“The Color Purple,” “Lethal Weapon”), the beloved Emmy Award-winning actress Ja’net DuBois (best known for her role as Willona in the TV series “Good Times”) and executive director, Ayuko Babu (pronounced Eye-you-co Bah-boo), an international legal, cultural and political consultant who specializes in African Affairs. PAFF is a non-profit corporation dedicated to the promotion of ethnic and racial respect and tolerance through the exhibit of films, art, and other creative expressions.