Film & Cinematography News South Africa

South African documentary to show at two international film festivals

Today, Wednesday, 21 September 2011, the Montreal International Black Film Festival (MIBFF) will screen the award-winning South African documentary, Forerunners. The film will also show in October at the United Nations Association Film Festival (UNAFF) in San Francisco.

This follows the film's success at the Cannes International Pan African Film Festival earlier this year, where it received a prestigious jury award.

Producer and UCT Unilever managing consultant, Paul Egan (far left), director Simon Wood (far right), Canadian director Nathalie Gouin, and jury president of the Pan African Film Festival, Catherine Rouelle.
Producer and UCT Unilever managing consultant, Paul Egan (far left), director Simon Wood (far right), Canadian director Nathalie Gouin, and jury president of the Pan African Film Festival, Catherine Rouelle.

The documentary, which charts the lives of four middle-class black South Africans, received the coveted Dikalo trophy and was one of only two films that received awards for excellence at the annual festival in Cannes.

This international film festival recognition is a further feather in the caps of Cape Town director Simon Wood and UCT's Unilever Institute of Strategic Marketing, the documentary's producer.

The concept for the film originated from a research project by the UCT Unilever Institute, which explored South Africa's burgeoning black middle class. Interviews with a number of research respondents revealed a more complex relationship between traditional values and consumer behaviour, as well as some compelling stories about how ordinary South Africans were negotiating societal transformation.

Receiving acclaim internationally

Director of the UCT Unilever Institute, Emeritus Professor John Simpson, said he was delighted that Forerunners was receiving acclaim internationally.

"It is one of only 70 films selected for the United Nations Association Film Festival from 600 submissions from all over the world. This speaks to both the quality of its production and the power of its narrative," he said.

"It was also extremely well-received locally when it was screened at the Encounters Documentary Film Festival in June and at the Durban International Film Festival in July."

The MIBFF aims to encourage the making of films that focus on the realities of black people from around the world, while UNAFF celebrates the power of film in conveying issues associated with human rights.

Films from the UNAFF are also screened in major centres throughout the United States and in selected cities across the world in its traveling film festival.

Simpson said it was exciting that Forerunners would be seen extensively in America as well as elsewhere in the world. "The traveling film festival will enable audiences from across the US and the rest of the world to deepen their understanding of South Africa and its people," he concluded.

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