FESPACO - a venriable institution
Ouagadougous Panafrican Film Festival, held in the capital
of Burkina Faso every two years, is now one of the continents major
cultural events, there is no doubt about that.
It was started back in 1969 to give black film makers a
much-needed event of their own along the lines of the Maghrebs Carthage
Festival. FESPACO 12 was held from 23 February to 2 March 1991.
Audiences have increased constantly over the years until the
whole continent has gradually become involved. The French-speaking side clearly
dominated to begin with, but the festival is doing more and more to reflect what
is going on in all the countries of Africa and the English-speaking encouraged
by the Golden Yennenga, the big prize, which went to Ghanaian Kwaw Ansahs
Heritage Africa in 1989, are in far greater evidence. This year, 200
films were shown to 300000 enthusiasts, including 1500 invitees from abroad, in
13 rooms.
Burkina Faso is the first to be thanked for this success. It is
one of the poorest countries in the world, but it believed in the festival from
the start and has willingly borne the bulk of the organisational costs,
sometimes with help from bilateral and multilateral funders including France,
Denmark, Sweden, the EEC and the ACCT. For Burkina shares the enthusiasm for
films so common throughout the Sahel, a phenomenon that is difficult to
understand at first sight, given the huge amounts the cinema costs in very
underprivileged countries. But the fact is that film production standards are
higher in Mali, Burkina Faso, Senegal and Niger than in better-off places like
CdIvoire, Gabon and Cameroon. This may be, as this years FESPACO
president, Malian film-maker Souleymane Cisspointed out a few years ago,
because the people there have the greatest need of works of fiction to escape
from their daily round of poverty.
These countries took most of the awards again this year. The
Golden Yennenga, Burkinas first, went to Idrissa Ouaogos
Tilawhich had done well at Cannes last year (Ouaogos previous
film, Yaaba, just missed the big prize in 1989) and the prize for
the best documentary, Yiri Kan, went to another Burkinabe, Issiaka
KonatBut the film which swept the board was Malian Adama Drabos
Ta donna, which took the Oumarou Ganda prize for the best work and
the ACCT, environmental, OAU, African critics, Institute of Oriental Languages
and City of Perugia awards. And the best actor and actress were Malian artistes,
Bala Moussa Ke and Mariatou Kouyat
This was the fourth time that the Commission of the European
Communities made an award for the best short African films illustrating
development problems or helping promote cultural identity; The judges, led by
Hubert Ferraton, gave the first prize, worth CFAF 1 million (FF 20000) to
Yiri Kan, the story of a boy whose father, a famous musician,
teaches him the balafon. The second prize, CFAF 500 000 (FF 10 000) went to
Dernier des Babingas by David Pierre Fila from Congo, in which an
old pygmy chief tells how the forest and the environment in which he lived
disappeared, and there was a special mention for Its not easy,
a dramatised warning about AIDS by Faustin Misanwu from Uganda.
Everyone agreed that FESPACO had dire organisational problems
this year. Finding somewhere to stay in Ouagadougou was practically impossible
and rooms were in such demand that a had been closed down for not taxes had to
be re-opened.
Worse still, some of the films for screening were still not
available the day before the festival began, spoiling any attempt-at a proper
screening schedule. On top of that, the chairman of the judges had to wait three
days to get the projector he needed to look at the selected films.
Everything fell into place at the last minute, as it so often
does in Africa, but let that not detract from the fact that FESPACO has grown
enormously over the past year or two - giantism, is how some people put it - and
that there are always meetings, seminars and discussion groups to add to an
already very busy event and that the whole logistical side of the festival needs
overhauling. Burkina Faso cannot go on paying for it all by itself indefinitely
either. The other countries of Africa will have to help pay for this showing of
their continents film industry. This would mean that the awards could be
more generous, a desirable improvement when some of the prizes which private-
European bodies award at Ouagadougou, carry more money than the Yennenga.
Lastly, FESPACO should take a close look at the subtitling of
English-language films and the translation of English-language discussions.
Better attendance by the English-speaking countries, many at which are still
avoiding the event, depends on making a success of this. It should be done
quickly too, for Zimbabwes Front-Line Film Festival in June last year is
to be a two-yearly event like FESPACO and there is a real risk that the
English-speakers will want to go:to Harare instead. However, the competition
could be healthy if it means that organisational methods are revised. FESPACO,
now an institution, must rise to the challenge.
A.T.