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I'm just emerging from the cocoon of work on a new book, so I'm a few weeks late on this story from the BBC- but fascinating nevertheless:
Nyagatare is a rural and dusty town in the east of Rwanda. But this
month it played host to the bright lights of Rwandan film talent.
As the sun drops behind one of Rwanda's iconic hills, a
giant, inflatable screen staggers into the air. This is "Hillywood",
Rwanda's very own travelling film festival.
Rwanda is a stunning country in all senses of the word.
As is the idea of having a film festival here. And the name Hillywood
reflects on both the beauty of Rwanda itself and on the aspirations of
its young filmmakers.
Story from Abby d'Arcy Hughes, BBC NEWS:
It's a rather unusual spot to launch a film festival.
Nyagatare is a rural and dusty town in the east of Rwanda. But this
month it played host to the bright lights of Rwandan film talent.
As the sun drops behind one of Rwanda's iconic hills, a
giant, inflatable screen staggers into the air. This is "Hillywood",
Rwanda's very own travelling film festival.
Rwanda is a stunning country in all senses of the word.
As is the idea of having a film festival here. And the name Hillywood
reflects on both the beauty of Rwanda itself and on the aspirations of
its young filmmakers.
It may be one of the poorest and one of the smallest countries in the world, but Rwanda has big ideas.
Hillywood is a film festival on a shoe-string. Out of next to nothing,
a small group of Rwandan filmmakers toured seven provinces of Rwanda
screening films every evening under the stars.
Rare treat
There is only one cinema in Rwanda and it is in the capital, Kigali. So
the filmmakers hopped on a couple of buses and took the cinema to the
people.
Life goes at a relatively slow pace in Rwanda. But when
Hillywood rolled into town, people were running to get to the stadiums
early.
It's a rare treat for people here in the countryside to see films on the big screen.
"Most Rwandans don't even have access to television or any medium of
the mass media," says Eric Kabera, the festival's organiser.
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This was the first time I saw a film in our local language, Kinyarwanda
Agnes Niyokwizerwa
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More importantly these are homemade films. Rwanda has welcomed numerous
foreign productions companies over the years. But Rwandan film culture
itself has failed to take root.
But at Hillywood the films are made by Rwandan
directors and producers, filmed in Rwanda and are in the local
language, Kinyarwanda.
Topping the bill was the film, Hey, Mr DJ! It's about
an arrogant, young DJ who finds out he is HIV positive. The film has
charm and a twist of comedy. But most importantly the crowd love it.
"It was very exciting," Agnes Niyokwizerwa told me. "This was the first
time I saw a film in our local language, Kinyarwanda. This is really
important for the people who don't speak another language.
In the attractive, crumbling lake-side town of Gisenyi the crowds simply refused to leave.
"We ran out of all the films to screen," says the Hillywood
coordinator, Ayuubu Kasasa. "They insisted that until we leave they are
not going to leave. We just couldn't offer them any more."
Afterwards, kids crowded round, eager to find out how
they could get into Rwandan film or how to get some camera training.
The world of film was suddenly within arm's reach.
Ask Rwandan kids what films they like and the names Rambo and Jackie Chan trip off the tongue.
It was international productions about the 1994 Rwandan genocide, like
Hotel Rwanda, which really put Rwanda back on the map for the rest of
the world.
That is what also inspired budding young Rwandan filmmakers to give film a go themselves.
A lot of the Rwandan filmmakers at the festival started out working
with foreign productions. But when HBO's trolleys and cranes
disappeared, so did the money. And filmmakers here now struggle to get
their stories told.
Kennedy Mazimpaka is an actor and has worked on a
couple of the big, foreign productions. He strongly believes that
Rwanda is up to the challenge.
"We're not going to keep on lagging behind because we had a genocide," he says.
"We need to go forward. Right now we need anything that can develop Rwanda. So why not a film industry?"
Rwandan filmmakers also have a lot more stories they want to tell.
"Rwanda has suffered a lot. I have suffered a lot. I want to express
it," says Gilbert Ndahayo.
His film, Behind This Convent, screened in the capital
Kigali. It is set 12 years after genocide in the courtyard behind his
parents' house. Both his parents and sister were murdered in there.
"The making of this film was a really hard thing to do," he said. "But I used it to try to heal myself."
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