|
AFRICA-RELATED VIDEOS AND FILMS AT UIUC
DECEMBER 2003
Unless otherwise noted, videos are in the Undergraduate Library
Media Center.
Subject Index
Catalog
1- 6000 a Day: An Account of a Catastrophe Foretold
Brooklyn, NY, 55 minutes
First Run/Icarus Films, 2001
Not cataloged, December 2003
How the failure of key individuals, prominent NGO's, and governments
to act allowed a catastrophe to fester -- a catastrophe that undoubtedly
could have been avoided. Since it appeared 20 years ago, AIDS has
left a trail of destruction behind it. This film answers the question
"Why did the world wait so long to react?" and dissects
the key moments in the global response to the epidemic.... (English
subtitles provided for narration in French.)
About the United Nations see Africa Recovery
Al abwab al moghlaka see The Closed Doors
2- Adieu Bonaparte
109 minutes
1996
VIDREC 791.4372 Ad45
Set in Egypt during Napoleon's 1798 campaign, the video centers
around the story of General Caffarelli, astronomer, inventor, sociologist,
and economist. Caffarelli sees the expedition not only as an opportunity
to discover the glories of Egyptian civilization but also as a chance
to discover himself. (In French.)
3- A.F.R.I.C.A.: A Lyric for Liberation
Burbank, CA, 8 minutes
Warner Brothers Record Library, 1988
study guide and video
VIDREC 781.64 Af83
The performance of a rap song sung by the group Stetsasonic denouncing
U.S. support of South Africa's white minority regime. The video
shows footage of frontline leaders, Jesse Jackson discussing destabilization,
and a concert in New York. Frontline: Southern Africa: A teaching
and study guide accompanies the A.F.R.I.C.A. video.
4- Africa: A History Denied
Alexandria, VA, 48 minutes
Time-Life Video and Television, 1995
VIDREC 960 Af8301
Because the white settlers of Africa could not believe that Africans
were responsible for the once great kingdoms of Great Zimbabwe and
the Swahili Coast, these ancient cultures were either credited to
wandering Phoenicians, the Queen of Sheba, or other white travelers.
Now the place where human history began is being reclaimed by descendants
of those lost cultures, and the glories of their accomplishments
are revealed.
5- Africa, a New Look
United States, 27 minutes
International Film Foundation, 1981
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
Presents a sampling of the people of Africa today: teachers and
students, politicians and artists, business people, farmers, fishermen,
and factory workers. Includes scenes of primary schools and universities,
commerical and family farms, religious sevices, and a political
rally.
6- Africa: Arts and Culture. Of Lions, Rabbits & Mbira Music
Champaign, IL, 30 minutes
University of Illinois Krannert Art Museum, 1998
Krannert VIDREC 358
Patricia Sandler tells the Zimbabwean story, the Lion on the Path,
of the man and the rabbit who played the mbira to save the sun from
the lion. She talks about an mbira, teaches a song, and talks about
music. Filmed in the African Gallery, Krannert Art Museum
7- Africa Calls: Its Drums & Musical Instruments
New York, 23 minutes
Carousel Film & Video, [1990]
Music Library: VIDREC ML544 A37
Drummer Babatunde Olantunji discusses the history and development
of drums and musical instruments in Africa.
Africa Come Back see Repercussions
8- Africa Dreaming
San Francisco, 109 minutes
California Newsreel, 1997
VIDREC 960.329 Af8
Four short videos on love from Namibia, Tunisia, Senegal, and Mozambique.
Originally produced for television broadcast. Sophia's Homecoming
/ directed by Richard Pakleppa; produced by Bridget Pickering --
Sabriya / written and directed by Abderrahmane Sissako; produced
by Dora Bouchoucha Fourati -- So Be It / written, directed and produced
by Joseph Gai Ramaka -- The Gaze of the Stars / directed by João
Ribeiro ; produced by Pedro Pimenta. (Sound track in various languages;
subtitles in English.)
9- Africa, Giant with a Future
30 minutes
1958
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
A report on sixteen countries southeast of the Sahara visited officially
by Congresswoman Frances P. Bolton. Shows the peoples, geography,
governments, and social and economic problems. Mrs. Bolton interviews
several heads of state.
10- Africa in Change: Continent of Africa (Lands below the Sahara)
Wilmette, IL, 22 minutes
Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, 1962
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
Reveals the importance of Africa in the world; shows causes and
effects of Africa's many political and social revolutions; pictures
contrasts in the way of life of its indigenous peoples; describes
the physical geography of the continent; explains non-Africans'
role in its development; and describes the nature of the problems
confronting new African nations.
11- Africa in Change: East Africa; Kenya, Tanganyika, Uganda
Wilmette, Illinois, 21 minutes
Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, 1962
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
Explores the great variety of East Africa's physical geography:
the coastal area, mountains arid plains, fertile grasslands, and
the scenic lake region. Examines the culture of various peoples
and describes the problems they face in a difficult transition.
12- Africa in Change: West Africa (Nigeria)
Wilmette, Illinois, 22 minutes
Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1963
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
Discusses the problems faced by the new nations of West Africa
illustrated in Nigeria. Shows what Nigerians are doing and have
done to create unity out of the diversity of ethnic, religious,
and economic traditions. Relates agricultural and mining activities
to the geographical diversity of the region.
13- Africa in Search of Itself
New York, 53 minutes
Time-Life Films, 1978
16mm film in the UIUC Cinema Studies collection
In Tanzania attitudes of ordinary Africans and government officials
are surveyed to find the ways they are changing in the post-colonial
adjustment period. The extended family as the basis of agricultural
organization is shown, and several ethnic groups are visited.
14- Africa Recovery
[About the United Nations]
New York, 15 minutes
United Nations Publications, 1990
VIDREC 341.759096 Ab76
This video examines the problems associated with Africa's current
economic state and the reasons behind them.
15- Africa, Search for Common Ground (program 12)
Cape Town, South Africa, 25 minutes
Common Ground Productions, 1997
VIDREC 963.5 Af83
Part of a series profiling formal efforts by various Sub-Saharan
African countries to resolve contemporary conflicts peacefully.
The first film highlights the wartime experiences of women in one
Eritrean family in Asmara and the issue of women's rights in an
independent Eritrea. The second film profiles Wangari Maathai and
the Green Belt movement, a tree-planting campaign organized by women
in Kenya. Maathai's place in Kenyan opposition politics is emphasized.
Contains: Eritrea: Three Generations of Women, Three Generations
of Struggle; Kenya: Entering the Politicians Den. (In English and
various languages, with English translations and voiceovers.)
16- Africa Sings
Vancouver, BC, Canada, 39 minutes
Villon Films, 1936, 1999
VIDREC 960.31 Af83
Made in 1936, Africa Sings is the first documentary from South
Africa to take a look at the lives of South Africans of all races.
There are invaluable images of location, life, schools and colleges,
and a cross-section of occupations, from mine-workers to road-gangs,
school-teachers to house-servants, waiters to cane-cutters. It is
provocative in its suggestion that poor whites are inferior to educated
blacks. The documentary is introduced by Paul Robeson, who also
sings.
17- Africa Speaks to the World
[Africa Speaks for Itself]
Maryknoll, NY, 28 minutes
Maryknoll World Video Library, 1986
VIDREC 338.96 Af834
Conversations with African government and church leaders concerning
their views about progress being made in Africa. The video contains
exclusive reports from Tanzania and Zimbabwe.
18- Africa: The Story of a Continent
Boston, MA, 421 minutes (4 videotapes)
Home Vision, 1984
VIDREC 960 Af8344
Episodes 5 & 6 (Part 3), 1997
Chicago, 106 minutes
Home Vision Select, 1997
VIDREC 960 Af8344h
Basil Davidson examines the art, history, politics, technology,
and culture of various nations on the African continent.
Part 1: Different but Equal looks at the slave trade in Africa.
Mastering a Continent examines three different communities and how
African peoples carved out an existence.
Part 2: Caravans of Gold traces the routes of the medieval gold
trade which reached from Africa to China and Europe. Kings and Cities
explores the ways in which African kingdoms functioned and features
a visit to Nigeria, where a king still holds court in a 15th century
palace.
Part 3: The Bible and the Gun examines explorers of Africa, including
Stanley and Livingstone. The Magnificent African Cake treats the
1800s, when colonial powers fought to partition Africa among themselves.
Part 4: The Rise of Nationalism examines the major struggles for
African independence in Ghana, Kenya, Algeria and the Belgian Congo.
The Legacy looks at Africa in the aftermath of colonial rule.
Indexed as #2
19- African Beats
San Rafael, CA, 60 minutes
Interworld Music, 1995
Music Library: VIDREC MT655 A3
Kalani and his ensemble of musicians review and demonstrate the
basic tones of the djembe and ashiko drums. Kalani demonstrates
the proper tuning technique for a djembe. Kalani and his ensemble
of musicians then demonstrate and perform various African rhythms
such as kakilambe, koukou, call, doudoumba, mandjiane, aconcon,
and timini.
20- African Carving: A Dogon Kanaga Mask
New York, 20 minutes
Phoenix Films for Harvard University Film Study Center, 1975
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
Examines the ceremonies and rituals surrounding the Kanaga mask.
Shows the ritual of carving the mask and presents parts of the ceremony
in which the mask is used to release the spirit of a dead man.
21- An African City: Contrasting Cultures
New York, 11 minutes
BFA Educational Media, 1970
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
Compares and highlights traditional African life, French colonialism,
and recent independence in a brief survey of Abidjan, a prosperous
city in the Ivory Coast. Presents a concise treatment of the differing
cultures, economics, and lifestyles existing in modern African cities.
22- An African Community: The Masai
New Brunswick, NJ, 16 minutes
Bailey-Film Associates, 1970
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
The Masai of the East African highlands lead lives which are shaped
by their environment. The film shows their dependence on the land,
their adaptation to the environment, and their interdependence.
The Masai depend on cattle to fill most of their needs, from food
to housing materials. The film depicts the Masai as a brave and
proud people who survive under adverse conditions.
23- African Continent: An Introduction
Chicago, IL, 16 minutes
Coronet Instructional Films, 1962
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
The film presents a geographical, historical, and cultural overview
of the African continent, stressing the theme of emergence of peoples,
of new independent nations, and of rapidly growing economies. The
film shows major land forms, climatic regions, natural resources,
and land use, emphasizing Africa's vast, still-to-be-developed wealth
and its growing importance in today's world.
24- African Continent: Northern Region
Chicago, IL, 14 minutes
Coronet Instructional Films, 1962
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
The film shows that the interaction of the modern with the colorful
and traditional characterizes Northern Africa. It discusses three
factors which influence this geographic region: its primarily Arab
background and culture, its age-old lack of water, and its long
history of European influence. The film also shows oasis farming,
Arab craftsmanship, and modern industries and cities; and views
some of the problems that face Muslims and Europeans.
25- African Continent: Southern Region
Chicago, IL, 11 minutes
Coronet Instructional Films, 1962
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
Surveys Southern Africa as a region of great wealth and great potential,
describing gold and diamond fields, the windswept sheep ranches
of the western uplands, and the warm fruitlands of the eastern coast.
Explains that migration and immigration have brought together different
peoples who face many challenges in developing the region's resources
and in solving the problems of emerging nationhood.
26- African Craftsmen: The Ashanti
New York, 11 minutes
BFA Educational Media, 1970
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
Specialists from the Ashanti people demonstrate their arts of weaving
and carving. The film concentrates on the making of ceremonial robes
and chiseling of large blocks of wood into individually designed
stools once used as thrones of kings.
27- African Culture: Drumming and Dance
Chatsworth, CA, 22 minutes
AIMS Multimedia, 2000
VIDREC 784.68 Af83
The music group called Ashante-Sebei teaches the viewers polyrhythms.
Ashante is the name of an ethnic group found in West Africa and
Sebei is the name of an ethnic group found in East Africa. Members
are Margo Black, singer, choreographer and story teller, etc., and
Tony Rios and David Closson, percussionists.
28- African Dance & Percussion
[Nairobi?], 100 minutes
1996?]
VIDREC 784.1886 Af83
Performances of a variety of traditional African dance and drumming
followed by 20 minutes of an African pop music concert. Film has
no narration. Contains: Sherekea based from coastal rhythms; Baganda
dance from Uganda; Percussion with rhythms from Nyanza; I sukuti
dance from Western province; Enumasole rhythms from South Africa;
Nyatiti from Nyanza province; Percussion Bana ba Kenya; Sengenya
from Kongo; Orutu dance from Nyanza.
29- African Drought
New York, 30 minutes
American Broadcasting Company, 1974
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
The film tells the story of the proud people of Niger who are dying
by the thousands from starvation and disease brought on by six years
of drought.
30- African Guitar: Solo Fingerstyle Guitar
Cambridge, MA, 60 minutes
Rounder Records, 1995
Music Library: VIDREC M1830 A37
Guitar music, composers, and performers of Congo, Uganda, Central
African Republic, Malawi, Namibia, and Zambia. Cultural anthropologist
Gerhard Kubik's personal field recordings, 1966-1993. This video
offers a rare view into the rich textures of African fingerstyle
guitar music.
31- African Horse Sickness
Washington, DC, 29 minutes
National Audiovisual Center, 1962
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
This film explains that horse sickness killed an estimated three
hundred thousand equines in two summers in the Middle East and Asia,
pointing out that the disease spread from Africa through the Middleastern
countries to India. The film also presents a photographic record
of the progress of the disease from infection to death. It describes
the development, manufacture, and administration of preventive vaccines.
32- African Odyssey: The Red Bicycle
Northbrook, Illinois, 13 minutes
Learning Corporation of America, 1980
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
The film shows the assembly, painting, and sale of a red bicycle
in Nairobi. It follows the bike to its new home in a nearby village
to illustrate economic life in Africa.
33- African Odyssey: The Two Worlds of Musembe
New York, 15 minutes
Learning Corporation of America, 1971
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
A description of the life of an eleven-year-old African boy showing
the pull of ethnic identity against a growing sense of nationalism.
34- An African Recovery
New York, NY, 27 minutes
First Run Icarus Films, 1988
VIDREC 333.736153 Af83
This film focuses on new efforts being made by rural development
planners and ordinary citizens to find ways of minimizing the risk
of eroding the landscape of the Sahel. The film explores community
projects among various groups in Niger, showing how local development
efforts can help create solutions tailored to local needs. (English
narration and subtitles.)
35- African Sanctus: David Fanshawe, the Story of a Journey
New York, 50 minutes
Time-Life Films, 1976
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
The film retraces composer/explorer David Fanshawe's odyssey across
the length and breadth of Africa, where he documented vanishing
cultures and observed the faiths, symbols, and rituals which inspired
his now famous composition, African Sanctus. (See video #27.)
36- African Sanctus: The Story of a Journey (David Fanshawe's African
Sanctus)
New York, 47 minutes
Time-Life Video, 1977
VIDREC 780.923 Af83
This film retraces the African journey of English composer David
Fanshawe. During his travels, he became especially attracted to
traditional folk music and taped whatever music he came across.
He used these recordings, along with his own music, to conceive
a colorful Latin Mass that combines Moslem, African and Christian
traditions.
37- African Tribes -- Series 1
La Jolla, CA, 10 minutes
Paul Hoefler Productions, 1944, revised 1950
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
Shows four peoples from Kenya and Congo: the Bamburi, the Efe of
the great Ituri Forest, the Mangbetu from the central Congo, and
the Rendili nomads of the Kaisut Desert.
38- The Africans
Santa Barbara, CA, 9 videocassettes, 60 minutes each
The Annenberg/CPB Project : Intellimation [distributor], 1986
VIDREC 960 Af8341
This highly acclaimed series examines the contemporary life and
history of Africa through its triple heritage: what is indigenous,
what was contributed by Islam, and what was acquired from the West.
The coexistence of these three legacies helps to explain the diversity
of the continent and the African people. Host Ali Mazrui recalls
the Africa that existed before outsiders came, describing its kingdoms
and customs. Filmed in 20 countries, the series chronicles the arrival
of Islam and demonstrates its influence on trade, architecture,
language, law, and learning. Similarly, it traces the path of Christianity
from ancient Ethiopia to modern missionaries.
The films in this series are:
1) Anatomy of a Continent examines Africa as the birthplace of
humankind and discusses the impact of geography on African history,
including the role of the Nile in the origin of civilization, and
the introduction of Islam to Africa through its Arabic borders.
2) The Triple Heritage of Lifestyles explores how African contemporary
lifestyles are influenced by indigenous, Islamic, and western factors.
The film compares simple African society with more complex and centralized
societies, and examines the importance of family life in these societies.
3) New Gods examines the factors that influence religion in Africa,
with particular attention to the interactions of traditional African
religions, Islam, and Christianity.
4) Exploitation contrasts the impact of the West on Africa and
the impact of Africa on the development of the West, looking at
the manner in which Africa's human and natural resources have been
exploited before, during, and after the colonial period.
5) New Conflicts explores the tensions inherent in the juxtaposition
of the three heritages, exploring the ways in which these tensions
have contributed to the rise of the nationalist movement, the warrior
tradition of indigenous Africa, the jihad tradition of Islam, and
modern guerilla warfare.
6) In Search of Stability studies several means of governing. New
social orders are examined to illustrate an Africa in search of
a viable form of government during the post-independence period.
7) A Garden of Eden in Decay? identifies the problems of a continent
that produces what it does not consume and consumes what it does
not produce, showing Africa's struggles between economic dependence
and decay.
8) A Conflict of Cultures shows the coexistence of many African
traditions and modern life and the conflicts and compromises that
emerge from the mixing of cultures. It explores whether Africa can
synthesize its own heritage with the legacies of Islam and the West.
9) Africa in the World illustrates African contributions to contemporary
culture, including the significance of the African diaspora, and
examines the continuing influence of the superpowers on the affairs
of the continent.
39- Africa's Vanishing Wildlife
Garden City, NY, 15 minutes
Doubleday Media, 1967
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
Shows that it is possible for many kinds of animals to live together
in Africa's interrelated wildlife community. Discusses how man-made
pressures threaten the remaining wildlife regions in Africa.
40- The Afrikaner Experience: Politics of Exclusion
New York, 35 minutes
Learning Corporation of America, 1977
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
The film traces the history of the Afrikaners from the arrival
of the Dutch in 1652 to the political control of South Africa. It
explores the structure of the apartheid system: the complete legal
separation of whites and non-whites, the defensive posture of the
Afrikaner Nationalist Party, and both internal and external opposition.
41- L'Afrique en Français
Champaign, IL, 36 minutes
University of Illinois Film Center, 1984
VIDREC 960 Af846il
In this film three French-speaking Africans introduce their homelands:
Cameroon, Mali, and Senegal. Interviews and dialogues describe different
aspects of indigenous lifestyles such as language, education, religion,
politics, food, activities of leisure, and community. Sub-sections
are titled: Le Cameroun, Ibu et le Sénégal, Un Jour
Dans la Vie de Karim; Afrique, Poème de David Diop, and Le
Sénégal. The native speakers are students in graduate
programs at the University of Illinois. Language skill level required
is intermediate to advanced. (Final dialogue on tape requires advanced
language skill.)
42- Afrique, Je Te Plumerai (Africa, I Will Fleece You)
San Francisco, CA, 89 minutes
California Newsreel, 1992
VIDREC 967.11 Af84
This documentary examines the legacy of European colonialism in
Africa, especially continued cultural domination in Cameroon, the
only African country colonized by three European powers. Through
a mix of dramatization, satire, personal reflection, news reels,
and oral testimony, producer/director Jean-Marie Teno touches upon
the concepts of democratization, governance, modernity versus tradition,
popular culture, and the re-interpretation of the colonial experience.
(In French with English subtitles.)
43- Afro-American Music: Its Heritage
New York, 16 minutes
Communications Group West, 1969
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
This film is a visual and musical demonstration of the origin and
history of Afro-American music. Calvin Jackson and his quartet and
Bobby Collette perform.
44- After the Hunger and Drought
San Francisco, CA, 52 minutes
California Newsreel, 1987
VIDREC 801.3096891 Af89
This documentary examines some of Zimbabwe's leading literary figures
such as Dambudzo Marechera and Stanlake Samkange. It includes debates
concerning the role of the writer in society, the place of tradition
in modern literature, and race, class, and gender in contemporary
literature.
45- AIDS in Africa
Princeton, NJ, 58 minutes
Films for the Humanities and Sciences, 2000
VIDREC 362.1969792 Ai25254
This video describes the harsh reality of the AIDS epidemic in
Zimbabwe, one of the countries hardest hit by the disease in Africa.
46- AIDS in Africa: Living with a Time Bomb
Princeton, NJ, 33 minutes
Films for the Humanities & Sciences, 1991
VIDREC 362.1969792 Ai2509
The poignant stories told in this program show Africans in all
walks of life dying of a disease they could have prevented had they
only known. The message to the viewer is that ignorance of AIDS
kills and anyone who engages in sex can get AIDS.
47- Ainsi Meurent les Anges
San Francisco, CA, 57 minutes
California Newsreel, 2001
VIDREC 791.436543 Ai65
Mory is a troubled Senegalese poet living outside Paris with his
French wife and their children. His marriage falls apart under cross-cultural
pressures, specifically his father's demand that he take a second
wife in Senegal. Homeless in winter, separated from his children,
his poems scattered over a Paris street, Mory returns to Senegal,
penniless and with uncertain prospects. (In French and Wolof with
English subtitles.)
48- Aladura: The Praying People
24 minutes
1977
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
Presents beliefs and customs as practiced by the Aladura in the
Cherubim and Seraphim Church of London with explanatory comments
by D.Y.Peel. This independent church was established by and for
the support of Yoruba immigrants from Western Nigeria.
49- Alan Paton's Beloved Country
Vancouver, BC, Canada, 55 minutes
Villon Films, 1999
VIDREC 809 Al11
Alan Paton -- teacher, author, politician -- was one of South Africa's
most remarkable sons. This documentary reveals the man and the complex
relationship he had with his country.
50- Alex Haley: The Search for Roots
Princeton, NJ, 18 minutes
Films for the Humanities, 1977
VIDREC 929.2 H13f
Alex Haley explains how and why he came to write his book Roots.
The book became a highly acclaimed TV-adapted series.
51- Algeria
Canada, 28 minutes
National Film Board of Canada, 1962
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
This film surveys the history of Algeria up to the time of the
French-Algerian agreement and last stand of the outlawed European
army.
52- Algeria: Women at War
New York, 52 minutes
Women make Music, 1992
Not cataloged, December 2003
A rare insight into the key role Algerian women played in their
country's liberation struggle from the French thirty years ago and
their equally important place in today's politics. The docuumentary
uses a combination of interviews and archival footage to show the
position of women in Algeria in the light of thirty years of single-party
rule, the rise of Islam, and increasing political violence. It raises
critical questions about the balancing act between women's and national
liberation struggles.
53- Algeria's Bloody Years
New York, 59 minutes
First Run/Icarus Films, 2003
VIDREC 965.053 Al35
Chronicles Algeria's struggle for democracy since independence
from France, tracing the rise of fundamentalist groups in the 1980's
and 90's in response to the country's authoritarian leadership.
The film examines Algeria's descent into a morass of massacres among
the Islamic guerillas, the military, and civilians. Algeria's first
democratic election since independence went to the Islamic Salvation
Front (FIS), but when they initiated Islamic reforms, protests erupted.
With the FIS positioned to win the 1991 elections, the military
circumvented the democratic process and cancelled the vote, bringing
about a massive revolt with many sent to prison camps that became
breeding grounds for terrorism. (In English and French with English
subtitles.)
54- Alhaji Bai Konte
Kennett Square, PA, 12 minutes
Cultural Encounters, 1979
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
This is a portrait of a Mandinka kora musician, Alhaji Bai Konte.
55- Ali Zaoua: Prince of the Streets
[United States], 95 minutes
Filmmovement, 2003
DVD 791.43655 Al41
Ali, Kwita, Omar, and Boubker are a group of street urchins living
in the hard streets of Casablanca. In order to survive they create
a bond of friendship and family between them. The bond is cut short
when Ali is senselessly killed; his life taken by a single act of
a rival gang. Ali's friends decide not to report his death to the
police, who would have the boy buried in a potter's field. (In Arabic
with opitonal English subtitles.)
56- Allah Tantou = God's Will Be Done
San Francisco, CA, 62 minutes
California Newsreel, 1991
VIDREC 966.5205092 Al51
Created by film-maker David Achkar, this film confronts the immense
personal and political cost of human rights abuses common to some
revolutionary governments in post-independent Africa. Achkar accomplishes
this by following the life of his diplomat father, Marof Achkar,
who became a political prisoner in Sékou Touré's Guinea
during the late 1960s. (In French with English subtitles.)
57- Amandla
[United States], 103 minutes
Artisan Entertainment, 2003
Not cataloged, December 2003
The story of black South African freedom music and the central
role it played against apartheid. The focus is on the struggle's
spiritual dimension, as articulated and embodied in song for more
than 40 years. Winner 2002 Sundance Film Festival.
58- The American Connection
Washington, DC, 10 minutes
American Labor Education Center, 198-?
VIDREC 331.893 Am35
On-location footage of Americans discussing the issue of America's
connections with South Africa, this film shows South African police
violence,and a panel discussion between AFSCME officials and members
of the S. A. United Church of Christ. In addition, it includes an
interview with representatives of South Africa's largest labor organization.
59- Les Amis de Mes Amis (Little Mothers of the Bush)
Princeton, NJ, 26 minutes
Films for the Humanities, 1991
VIDREC 306.08996 Am57
The story of two young Falli girls, ages 9 and 7, of northern Cameroon.
The Falli are well-known for their children who are physically advanced
beyond what is normal for their ages in other cultures -- they have
nearly a full set of teeth at 5 months, and walk by themselves at
6 months. It is the obligation of little girls to care for the infants
of the family and to help in the fields, grinding grain, and cooking.
60- Among the Wild Chimpanzees
Washington, DC, 59 minutes
National Geographic Society, c1993
VIDREC 599.8850924 G61a
Documents Jane Goodall's twenty-two year field research on the
wild chimpanzees of East Africa. Shows the chimpanzees' nomadic
behavior, their family structure, and their ability to hunt and
make and use tools. Also looks at discoveries of warfare and cannibalism
among wild chimpanzees.
61- Anansi the Spider
Chicago, Illinois, 10 minutes
Gerald McDermott Films, 1969
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
Anansi is a folk hero of the Ashanti people of Ghana. In this tale,
Anansi falls into a river and is swallowed by a fish. His six extraordinary
sons save him. Then he is carried off by a falcon; again his sons
save him. Anansi wants to give a beautiful white globe to the son
who saved him the most. Which son is it? Nyame, the One God, places
the shining globe in the sky for all to share: it is the moon. The
geometric forms of the Ashanti inspired the animation design.
62- Angano...Angano: Nouvelles de Madagascar = Tales from Madagascar
San Francisco, CA, 64 minutes
California Newsreel, 1989
VIDREC 791.4372 An41
Explorationn of Malagasy oral tradition, specifically, the passing
down of the "wisdom of the ancestors" through myths and
folktales. Contemporary storytellers recount some of the founding
myths of Malagasy culture, such as the creation of man and woman,
the origin of rice cultivation, and the domestication of cattle.
The video features shots of Malagasy life including storms, brush
fires, herding, the famadihana, and exhuming or "turning the
dead." (In Malagasy and French with English subtitles.)
63- Arab Diaries
New York, 130 minutes
First Run/Icarus Films, 2000
VIDREC 390.0953 Ar11
This is a five-part documentary series providing fresh insight
into contemporary life across the Arab World. The five groundbreaking
videos present a fresh. insightful picture of contemporary life
across the Arab World, including countries we know little about.
They tell intimate stories of individuals confronting the hardships
and conflicts related to the most basic milestones. Each film thematically
centers on one of the universal phases of life, namely Birth; Youth;
Love and Marriage; Work and Money; Home, or Maids in my Family.
(Arabic with English subtitles.)
Part 1: Birth presents three powerful stories: In Palestine Fatima
is caught in a cycle of pregnancies because she fears if she does
not produce a male child for her husband, he will marry another
woman. In Baghdad, Daoud is a sick baby born under the international
sanctions against Iraq. In a Syrian village, Roza, after many years
of childless marriage, has learned that her husband has the fertility
problem, not her, as she struggles with the traditional expectations
of her society.
Part 2: Youth looks at the dilemmas of young women in three Arab
countries. Nancy, struggling with traditional barriers inherent
in Lebanese society, is not supposed to move out of her mother's
home until she is married, but she desperately desires independence.
Sara is a 16-year old Egyptian athlete playing soccer, a game traditionally
reserved for men. Shahra and Linda perform in an Algerian female
rap group famous for social and political lyrics, which has become
a unique expression of dissent in the face of a conservative society
and Islamic violence.
Part 3: Love & Marriage begins by looking at societal opposition
to interfaith marriage in Lebanon. Lama and Fouad are very much
in love but he is a Christian and she is a Muslim. Their love is
doomed because their society will not allow them to marry across
the religious divide. Marita, a woman in her mid-forties, has never
recovered from a forbidden love that blossomed during the Lebanese
war. In Algeria, a hair saloon is one of the few social milieus
where women can discuss their lives freely. Here we meet Lila, who
was prevented from marrying the man she loved because his mother
did not approve of her "Western" ways, and other customers
whose lives have clashed with tradition.
Part 4: Work and Money explores the hopes of men and women in Iraq,
Palestine, and Syria, as embodied in the occupation of flying. Captain
Hatem's dream was realized when he became a pilot for Iraqi Airlines.
But now because of the sanctions against Iraq, the airline does
not fly, nor does he. In Gaza, Miral is an illegal resident in her
own country. Her only way out of Gaza is by working as an airline
stewardess on short flights around the Middle East. Like so many
Syrian young people, Ammar believes he has no future in his country.
This film follows him through his final weeks in Damascus as he
prepares to take a job in Dubai working for Gulf Air.
Part 5: Home, or Maids in my Family focuses on one extraordinary
young Moroccan woman's first-person story, in which she confronts
her family and their servants about the relationships between them
over the years, and what these relationships may reveal about Moroccan
society and her own life. As the narrative develops, she embarks
on a search to find the one maid who eventually declared her independence
to marry and leave the family home.
64- Arabian Seafarers: In the Wake of Sinbad
Princeton, NJ, 44 minutes
Films for the Humanities, c1993
VIDREC 387.50953 Ar11
Sindbad the sailor was the legendary hero of a 10th-century Arabian
seafarer's tale, but legends are usually embellished history; this
program looks at the reality behind the tale, following the old
sea route to East Africa, Sir Lanka, and India and showing how many
traces of Arabic influence can still be found in these regions today.
65- Art Endangered: A Glimpse of a Dying Craft
New York, 23 minutes
AH Productions, 1980-1985?
VIDREC 709.6 Ar752
(3/4-inch format, not currently playable in Media Center)
Hosted by African ethnologist and art historian, Rhoda Levison,
the video focuses on the artwork (beadwork, pottery, and baskets)
of the Zulu, Hambu, Herero, and Ndebele peoples of southern Africa.
Contents: Basketry of the Zulu Basket weavers of Kwa-Zulu; The Bayei
and Hambukushu Weavers of Ngamiland; Herero Dress; Zulu Beadwork
and Ornamentation; Nesta Nala: Master Potter; and The Ornamentation
and House Decoration of the Ndebele.
66- The Art of the Dogon
New York, 24 minutes
Home Vision, 1988
Krannert VIDREC 159
Attempts to capture the beauty and power of Dogon art of Mali while
placing it in context within Dogon beliefs and culture.
67- The Art of West African Strip-Woven Cloth
Washington, DC, 12 minutes
National Museum of African Art, 1987
Krannert VIDREC 362
This film explores the creative activities of the various artisans
involved in textile production: spinners, dyers, weavers, sewers.
In many areas of West Africa, fabric is woven in long narrow strips,
cut in lengths, and sewn together to make rectangular cloths with
striking geometric patterns.
68- Arts and Crafts in West Africa
New York, 11 minutes
Film Associates, 1969
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
Shows how art and crafts in West Africa have developed in response
to the need for domestic utensils, tools, clothing, and objects
of religious nature. Craftsmen of today create goods from leather,
cloth, metal, clays, gourds, and rattan. They reflect not only the
artistic sense of the people, but the practical way in which they
meet everyday needs with materials supplied by their environment.
69- Arusi ya Mariamu (The Marriage of Mariamu)
Enchino, CA, 36 minutes
Ron Mulvihill, 1988.
VIDREC 960 Ar85
Set in contemporary Tanzania, this video centers around the art
and science of healing through traditional medicine. The film depicts
the story of Mariamu, a woman afflicted with a mysterious illness
who seeks medical assistance in a variety of forms in search of
a cure. Throughout the course of her illness, Mariamu and those
close to her find themselves in conflict with their traditional
values. (In Swahili with English subtitles.) On same video: Sharing
is Unity (q.v.).
70- Asante market women
[Disappearing world
New York, 54 minutes
Filmmaker's Library, 1982
VIDREC 381.18082 As13
Examines the matrilineal and polygamous Ashanti society of Ghana
through interviews with women who excerise complete authority in
the wholesale produce market. The interviewees reveal the advantages
and tribulations of their relationships, the practical problems
they confront and the various solutions they embrace. (English narration
with segments in Ashanti (Twi) with English subtitles.)
71- Asinamali = Nothing to Lose
Brooklyn, NY, 66 minutes
Advanced Media, 1987
VIDREC 822 N499a
This play portrays the horrors of apartheid and life in prison
in South Africa. In December 1985 during the state of emergency
in South Africa a play was performed there which many whites found
disturbing. Written, directed, and acted by blacks from the townships,
the play is about the exploits of five men who end up in jail. Their
stories reveal the feelings at the root of the violence in South
Africa.
72- Assignment: Africa
Boston, MA, 60 minutes
Christian Science Monitor Video, 1993
VIDREC 960 As752
Profiles Africa and explores pertinent issues of global impact
such as democracy, education, women's rights, and the economy. (In
English and African languages with English subtitles.)
73- Assignment Africa: An Inside Story Special Edition
New York, NY, 58 minutes
New Atlantic Productions, 1986.
VIDREC 960 As75
This film includes case studies of how the American media neglects
Africa, including its initial reluctance to cover the Ethiopian
famine and the untold story of Zimbabwe's successes since independence.
In addition, it includes footage from Sudan, Kenya and Uganda. A
viewer's guide with added information and suggested study assignments
accompanies the cassette.
74- Bab El-Oued City
Seattle, WA, 93 minutes
Arab Film Distribution, 1994
VIDREC 791.43655 B112
Bab El-Oued is a working class district of Algiers. A young worker
commits an act which puts the entire district in turmoil. Deals
with the rise of Islamic fundamentalism in Algeria. (In Arabic and
French with English subtitles.)
75- Balloon Safari
Briarcliff Manor, NY, 54 minutes
Benchmark Films, 1975
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
Joan and Alan Root examine the flora and fauna of Central Africa
from their hot-air balloon.
76- Banking on Life and Debt
Maryknoll, NY, 30 minutes
Maryknoll World Films, 1995
VIDREC 332.1532 B2
Demonstrates how millions of children are sacrificed for the sake
of financial stability. Traces the post-World War II change which
led to the current world economic order. Examines the role of the
World Bank. Viewers travel to Ghana, Brazil, and the Philippines
for reports.
77. Baobab: Portrait of a Tree
New York, 53 minutes (also abridged version, 30 minutes)
McGraw-Hill Films, 1973
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
This film shows the teeming inter-dependent life of birds, insects,
and mammals found in baobab trees rising out of African grasslands
and semideserts from the Sudan to South Africa.
78- Battle of Adwa (1896) as Depicted in Traditional Ethiopian
Art: Changing Historical Perspective
London, 40 minutes
City Poly Media Services, 1986
VIDREC 963.043 B322
(PAL format)
The Battle of Adwa was a notable event in the European scramble
for Africa -- a resounding defeat of a colonial power by a then
little-known African state. The battle was naturally remembered
with pride by the Ethiopians, and was a perpetual source of interest
and inspiration for the country's artists, whose paintings have
been described as "Byzantine art in an African setting."
79- Battle of Algiers
Santa Monica, CA, 125 minutes
Rhino, 1993
VIDREC 791.4372 B321r
This film is a dramatization of the conflict between Algerian nationalists
and French colonialists culminating in Algeria's independence in
1962. (French and Arabic dialogue with English subtitles.)
80- Becoming a Woman in Okriki
New York, 27 minutes
Filmakers Library, 1990
VIDREC 305.42 B389
Documenting a coming of age ritual in a village on the Niger Delta,
this film offers an interesting profile of the complex balance between
modern and traditional practices and values. The Iria rite consists
of the ornamentation of young women's bodies with painting, public
scrutiny and ritualistic fattening of their bodies, and the teaching
of the responsibilities of womanhood.
81- Beggar of Soutilé
Princeton, NJ, 26 minutes
Films for the Humanities, [19--]
VIDREC 398.2096 B394
This film presents a story from Ivory Coast that tells how the
selfish villagers of Soutilé were turned to stone. Long ago,
the people of Soutilé were known as the least hospitable
people on earth. One day an old beggar came to town. Children taunted
him and adults shut their doors in his face. Only Balou offered
him something to eat. That is why the "Sacred Mask of Health
and Life" allowed Balou and his family to escape the punishment
that befell the entire village.
82- Behind the Mask
New York, 52 minutes
Time Life Video, 1976?
VIDREC 391.43 B395
Examination of some of the carved ceremonial masks of the Dogon
of Mali, explaining how the artifacts are created and how they are
used in the sacred rituals of the Dogon. The film was originally
produced in 1975 by the BBC in association with Warner Brothers
and is narrated by Richard Attenborough.
83- Best of South Africa Now
New York, 59 minutes
Globalvision, 1991
VIDREC 384.55 B464
Highlights from the three-year run of the Emmy Award winning television
news magazine "South Africa Now," produced by Globalvision
in association with Africa Fund.
84- Beyond Borders: Arab Feminists Talk About Their Lives
Princeton, NJ, 50 minutes
Films for the Humanities & Sciences, 2000
Women and Gender Resources: VIDREC 305.409174927 B468
In the Arab world, women are fighting a two-front war against repressive
internal constraints and intrusive Western interference. In this
program, a feminist delegation composed of author Nawal Saadawi
and other renowned activists from the Middle East and North Africa
gathers at the UN, on college campuses, and in church basements
to speak out about deterioration of women's rights in the Arab states
in an effort to heighten awareness of the Arab feminist struggle
for equality and the effects of U.S. foreign policy on their efforts.
The Bible and the Gun see Africa (Part 5)
85- Biko: Breaking the Silence
New York, 51 minutes
Filmakers Library, 1987
VIDREC B. B5948f
This documentary profiles the life of Stephen Biko and the filming
of the feature Cry Freedom. It includes interviews with author Donald
Woods, filmmaker Richard Attenborough and representatives of various
political organizations. Biko, a young medical student whose philosophy
included a contagious racial pride and self-respect which the government
feared, was martyred -- the 46th African to die in police custody.
86- Bishop Desmond Tutu: Apartheid in South Africa
Pleasantville, NY, 20 minutes
Sunburst Communications, 1990.
VIDREC 305.800968 T8896
Introduces students to Bishop Tutu and his visions of peace in
South Africa.
Tutu, Desmond
87- Bitter Melons
New York, 30 minutes
Videorecord Corporation of America, 1972
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
Portrayal of the difficulty of survival in the central Kalahari
Desert in Southern Africa, in a zone where game is scarce because
waterholes are dry most of the year. A musician performs songs about
animals, the land, and social life. It also includes traditional
music, dances, and children's games.
88- Black and White in Color
Irvine, CA, 88 minutes
Lorimar Home Video, 1987
VIDREC 791.4372 B5614l
The idyllic life in a French-African settlement is rudely interrupted
in 1915 by the news of war in Europe. The French gamely assemble
a rag-tag army of African soldiers to try to capture a neighboring
German settlement. The result is a classic farce whose comedy is
enlivened by the antic clash of African versus European customs.
(French dialogue, English subtitles.)
89- Black Athena
San Francisco, CA, 52 minutes
California Newsreel, 1991
VIDREC 949.5 B561
Explores the debate around Prof. Martin Bernal's book, Black Athena,
on the African origins of Greek culture. Leading classicists and
Egyptologists discuss Bernal's thesis that 19th century scholars
systematically denied the connections between Greece and the non-European
cultures of the Eastern Mediterranean.
90- Black Jesus
Asheville, NC, 84 minutes
Ivy Video, c1997
VIDREC 791.4372 B5618
Based on actual incidents in the Congo, Woody Strode is a revolutionary
leader betrayed by one of his followers, and unwittingly martyred
by those in power. Throughout his interrogation and torture, the
entire horror of the confrontation is reflected in his eyes.
91- Black Man's Land
1) White Man's Country
Van Nuys, CA, 52 minutes
Bellwether Group, c1979
VIDREC 967.6203 W584
Through old stills, buried newsreels and contemporary interviews,
this film depicts the violence of colonial rule, white settlement,
and African resistance in Kenya.
2) Mau Mau
Van Nuys, CA, 52 minutes
Bellwether Group, 1986
VIDREC 967.6203 M44
This video examines the myth and reality of Africa's first modern
guerilla war following the state of emergency in Kenya declared
by the British government in 1952. It features newsreel and previously
inaccessible archive footage, as well as interviews with participants
on both sides.
3) Kenyatta
Van Nuys, CA, 52 minutes
Bellwether Group, 1979
VIDREC 967.62 K42WK
Archival and contemporary images create a portrait of a key figure
in 20th century politics and a case study of nationalism as a political
force in Africa. Kenyatta's political career encompassed more than
50 years of African history.
92- Black Power
Northbrook, IL, 57 minutes
Coronet Film & Video, 1992
VIDREC 966.705092 B561
Kwame Nkrumah's desire to create a modern industrial utopia in
West Africa led to the construction of the Akosombo Dam in Ghana,
but the promise of science and technology was distorted by political
corruption and greed.
93- Bloodlines and Bridges: the African Connection
Alexandria, VA, 54 minutes
PBS Video [distributor], 1987
VIDREC 305.896073 B623
This video examines efforts of contemporary African-Americans to
re-establish connections with their African heritage. It includes
some of the genealogical research of Marian Crawford and African
art dealer Walter Morgan featuring a former secretary for African
affairs, a traditional African dance troupe, and a school where
African-American children gain social consciousness by learning
about their own culture.
94- Booknotes: Defending the Spirit: A Black Life in America
West Lafayette, IN, 58 minutes
C-SPAN Archives, 1998
VIDREC 973.0496073 B6444
Randall Robinson talks about his book, Defending the Spirit: A
Black Life in America, including his personal experiences with discrimination
and his work in making U.S. foreign policymakers more aware of problems
in Africa and the Caribbean.
95- Bopha
Hollywood, CA, 120 minutes
Paramount, 1994.
VIDREC 791.43658 B644
Micah Mangena, a sergeant in South Africa's police force and an
unquestioning supporter of the powers that be, finds his world violently
torn apart when his son wakes up to the evils of the apartheid system,
of which Micah is a part.
96- Bopha! = Arrest!
New York, 60 minutes
Advanced Media, 1986
VIDREC 822 M8793b
Bopha! is a video that integrates drama, documentary and newsreel
footage into a powerful story dealing with the complex struggle
between the black police who enforce the laws of apartheid and blacks
fighting to end it. Highlighted by the performance of "The
Earth Players," a township theater group, this work is narrated
by Sidney Poitier.
97- Boran Women
Hanover, NH, 18 minutes
American Universities Field Staff, 1974
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
This film describes how the availability of education and other
aspects of modernization are changing Boran women's attitudes even
as they maintain their traditional and influential roles in a herding
culture.
Born Musicians see Repercussions
98- Borom Sarret = The Wagoner
New York, 20 minutes
New Yorker Films, 2000
VIDREC 791.43653 B6452
This Sembène video tells the story of a cart-taxi driver
who goes to the city to make a living, but out of sympathy with
other poverty-stricken people, works for free and goes hungry himself.
(In Wolof and French with English subtitles.)
Botswana Safari see Capstick: Botswana Safari
99- Boulboul Effendi = Mr. Nightingale
[Egypt], 146 minutes
Arabian Video Entertainment, 1982
VIDREC 791.4372 B66
Comedy about two women who look alike and switch identities. One
is a successful actress and the other a factory worker. (Arabic
dialogue, English subtitles.)
100- Brazil: An Inconvenient History
New York, 47 minutes
Filmakers Library, Inc., 2000
VIDREC 981.03 B7392
Few realize that Brazil was actually the largest participant in
the slave trade in the New World. Forty percent of all slaves that
survived the Atlantic crossing were destined for Brazil. At one
time half of the population of Brazil were slaves. In 1888, it was
the last country to abolish slavery officially. This production
charts Brazil's history of slavery using original texts, letters,
accounts and decrees, with commentary by historians, anthropologists,
and others, who recount the effect of centuries of slavery on Brazil
today.
101- Breaker Morant
Burbank, CA, 106 minutes
RCA/Columbia Pictures Home Entertainment, c1984
VIDREC 791.4372 B7402
New York, 107 minutes
Fox Lorber Home Video, 1997.
DVD 791.4372 B7402f
A portrayal of the story of a controversial military court-martial
set in the South African Boer War in 1901. The brutal death of a
British captain incites British Lieutenant Harry Morant to pursue
and attack a Boer camp, resulting in the execution of prisoners
and the mysterious death of a missionary. A trial ensues during
which the British/Boer conflict climaxes and the accused lieutenants
receive a startling sentence.
102- Breaking Out
[Developing World]
Milton Keynes, England, 24 minutes
Open University, 1994
VIDREC 338.9 D492
This film examines how life has changed for Zimbabwean women since
independence in 1980.
Brer Rabbit stories see Juba
103- Buchi Emecheta
Ho-Ho-Kus, NJ, 27 minutes
The Roland Collection, c1988
VIDREC 809.896 B853
Nigerian author, Buchi Emecheta discusses such topics as her experiences
as a young mother, the position of black women in society, incest,
the role of women in Nigeria, and living in Britain.
104- Building a Boat on the Niger
New York, 8 minutes
International Film Foundation, 1967
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
The Bozo people on the Niger River in Mali construct a boat with
great attention to such details as nailing and sealing.
105- Building a House on the Niger
New York, 7 minutes
Julien Bryan and the International Film Foundation, 1967
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
This film shows, without narration, men of the Bozo people of Mali
building a thatched house on stilts.
106- Buma: African Sculpture Speaks
Wilmette, Illinois, 9 minutes
Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, 1952
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
Music and pictures of carved masks and statues are used to portray
the life of the peoples of West and Central Africa and to reflect
their fundamental fears and emotions.
107- Bushmen of the Kalahari
New York, 12 minutes
ABC ; McGraw-Hill, 1967
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
A study of a society of nomadic hunters in Botswana. Shows their
skills and wisdom, and speculates on their future in the modern
world.
108- Business as Usual
Boston, M, 39 minutes
Fanlight Productions, c1994
VIDREC 331.59 B964
Shows the successful functioning of businesses owned and operated
by the handicapped. Focuses on Deeds Industry in Jamaica, as well
as producing and manufacturing companies in Kenya, the Philippines,
and Nova Scotia.
109- Ça Twiste à Poponguine (Rocking Popenguine)
San Francisco, CA, 90 minutes
California Newsreel, 1993
VIDREC 791.4372 C11
This African comedy from Senegal is a bitter-sweet portrait of
the 1960s, the decade when any dream seemed possible, especially
for the young. The prominent socio-cultural themes include "coming
of age," "tradition," and "modernity."
(In French with English subtitles.)
110- Camp de Thiaroye
New York, 152 minutes
New Yorker Films, 1988
VIDREC 791.4372 C15
A powerful, fact-based drama by Sembène which, like Emitai,
deals with the dilemma of African troops in the French army at the
end of World War II -- a turning point in African history when the
colonial myth of white superiority began to collapse and an African
consciousness emerged. The story opens with repatriated Senegalese
infantrymen. (In French and Wolof with English subtitles.)
111- Can Primitive People Survive?
Chicago, 24 minutes
Avatar Learning Incorporated, 1976
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
The film examines the different responses of "primitive"
cultures to the modern industrial world by contrasting the traditional
way of life of the "pygmies" with that of the Eskimo.
112- Cape Town
Las Vegas, NV, 24 minutes
Educational Clearinghouse, [2001]
VIDREC 916.8735504 C17
An independent traveller's guide to Cape Town, South Africa.
113- Capstick: Botswana Safari
Tarzana, CA, 91 minutes
Sportsmen on Film, 1986
VIDREC 799.26 C174
Adventurer, author and former professional hunter Peter Capstick
leads a safari to three sections of Botswana, and along the way
gives advice on such things as what rifles to take, hunting strategies,
what a safari camp is like, etc.
114- Capstick: Hunting the Cape Buffalo
Tarzana, CA 42 minutes
Sportsmen on Film, 1986
VIDREC 799.27642 C174
Adventurer, author and former professional hunter Peter Capstick
shows what it is like to track herd after herd of cape buffalo in
the limited visibility of the heavy mopane scrub and terminalia
of the Chobe region of northern Botswana. One shot rarely takes
down the cape buffalo before the tracking begins. If you wound a
cape buffalo and he sees you, the inevitable result is quite simple
-- either you will kill him or he will kill you.
Caravans of Gold see Africa: The Story of a Continent
Caribbean Crucible see Repercussions
115- Casablanca
Farmington Hill, MI, 103 minutes
CBS/Fox Video, 1984
VIDREC 791.4372 C26 (Beta II)
Santa Monica, CA, 146 minutes
MGM/UA Home Video, 1998
VIDREC 791.4372 C26m (digital video)
Santa Monica, CA, 103 minutes
Voyager Compnay, 1989
VIDREC 791.4372 C26v (2 videodiscs)
Burbank, CA, 103 minutes
Warner Home Video, 1999
DVD 791.4372 C26w
This classic drama is the story of the struggle between diverse
individuals who have sought refuge in Casablanca after fleeing Nazi-occupied
Europe during World War II. Ilsa Lund (Ingrid Bergman) and her fugitive
husband, a leader of Europe's underground, must obtain visas to
guarantee their transit to America. Rick Blaine (Humphrey Bogart),
Ilsa's former lover, becomes an accomplice in the endeavor to assure
their safe departure.
116- Cat Hunting in Tanzania
Tarzana, CA, 45 minutes
Hunting Club, 1985
VIDREC 799.27755 C28
Filmed in the Selous Game Reserve (Tanzania) in 1984. Ken Wilson
hunts leopard and lion and Dave Harshbager hunts leopard with professional
hunter, Luke Samaras.
117- Ceddo
New York, 112 minutes
New Yorker Films, 2000
VIDREC 791.43658 C326
An historical epic set loosely in the 19th century, this Sembène
film examines the confrontation between opposing forces in the face
of Muslim expansion in Africa. (In Wolof and French with English
subtitles.)
118- Chain of Tears
San Francisco, CA, 52 minutes
California Newsreel, 1988
VIDREC 305.90694096 C349
This video illustrates the lasting psychological damage inflicted
on child victims of the apartheid regime in Mozambique, Angola,
and South Africa. (In English and Portuguese with English subtitles.)
119- Chantal's Choice
Concord, MA, 30 minutes
Student Intercultural Exchange, 1989
VIDREC 305.2350963 C363
This social documentary reflects on issues of growing up in different
cultures, depicting the story of a young African girl who decides
to become educated and as a result encounters an unexpected dilemma.
Produced in collaboration with students in Burkina Faso. (In French
and Moré with English subtitles.)
120- Chef! [Chief]
San Francisco, CA, 61 minutes
California Newsreel, 1999
On same reel with La Tête Dans les Nuages
VIDREC 967.1104 C415
In Chef!, producer Jean-Marie Teno locates the roots of Africa's
authoritarian regimes in the patriarchal family, reinforced by traditional
kingship and the colonial experience. Teno insists that this film
was not planned but imposed itself on him during a visit to his
ancestral village, Bandjoun, in the Ghomala-speaking region of Western
Cameroon. He had gone to film dances dedicating a monument to King
Kamga Joseph II, the filmmakers' great-granduncle, but the ceremony
soon turned into a celebration of one-man rule, in particular that
of Cameroon's President Paul Biya. (In French, with English subtitles.)
121- A Child's Century of War
New York, 90 minutes
First Run/Icarus Films, c2001
VIDREC 305.906949 C437
From the perspective of children, A Child's Century of War takes
the viewer on a journey through the past century, examining the
way in which modern wars have increasingly threatened and targeted
children.
122- Chinua Achebe
Princeton, NJ, 28 minutes.
Films for the Humanities and Sciences, 1994
VIDREC 823 Ac45Ychi
Bill Moyers interviews Nigerian novelist Chinua Achebe who discusses
the West's often inaccurate portrayal of Africa and how it is the
African story teller's obligation to be the collective memory of
the African people.
123- A Chip of Glass Ruby
New York, 58 minutes
Teleculture Inc., 1985
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
This is a study of the tensions engendered in an Indian family
living in South Africa when the wife is arrested for protesting
discriminatory laws. Based on a story by Nadine Gordimer.
124- Chocolat
Santa Monica, CA, 106 minutes
MGM Home Entertainment, 2001
DVD 791.43653 C451
A young woman returns to Cameroon to trace her past. Soon the sights,
sounds, and smells sweep her back to her childhood and memories
of the people who populated her youth. (French with English and
Spanish subtitles.)
125- Chopi Music of Mozambique; Banguza Timbil
El Cerito, CA, 60 minutes
Flower Films & Video, c1989
Music Library: VIDREC M1831.C4 C46
Two short documentaries depicting performances of the timbila (marimba)
music of the Chopi people who live in the village of Banguza in
the province of Zavala in Mozambique. The procedures and techniques
employed in making the musical instruments are shown in detail and
the stories of the dances performed to the music are explained.
126- The Chopi Timbila Dance
University Park, PA, 39 minutes
Pennsylvania State University, Audio-Visual Services, 1980
VIDREC 786.84 C456
African music specialist Andrew Tracey, composer Venacio Mbande,
and film-maker Gei Zantzinger collaborate to explain the basic elements
of the xylophone orchestras of the Chopi of Mozambique. The tuned
pitches of the various instruments, the cyclical melody form, and
the means of conducting and organizing the orchestra are among topics
covered. The accompanying dance's relationship to music is discussed.
The words of the song are translated throughout the film. (English
narration.)
127- Chronicle of a Genocide Foretold
New York, 141 minutes
First Run/Icarus Films, 1996
VIDREC 364.151 C468
Part one focuses on the Kibuye and Bugesera regions of Rwanda as
survivors return to pmassacre sites. Part two concentrates on the
largest massacre in Kigali and why the international community abandoned
the Tutsis of Rwanda. Part three examines what happened after the
massacres as the Hutus faced human rights abuses at the hands of
a new government largely made up of Tutsi extremists.
128- Chronicle of a Savanna Marriage: A Film
New York, 56 minutes
Filmakers Library, 1997
VIDREC 305.563096762 C461
For fifteen years, the filmmaker has monitored Nayiani's life,
a Masai on the savanna of southern Kenya. Starting when she was
fourteen and promised in marriage, through the years of marriage
and taking other wives, he shows the life and culture of the Masai.
(In Swedish and African language with English subtitles.)
129-Chronicle of the Smoldering Years = Waq¯a'i` sanaw¯at
al-djamr (Chronicle of the Years of Ember)
Seattle, WA, 177 minutes (2 videocassettes)
Arab Film Distribution, [199-] (1975)
VIDREC 791.43658 W194
Mohammed Lakdar-Hamina's epic feature follows one family's struggles
from 1939 to 1954 as revolutionary consciousness began to define
Algeria. The central character is a poor peasant who faces the hardships
of colonialism and serves with the French in World War II before
joining up with the Algerian resistance movement. Convincing performances
and fine historical detail. (In Arabic with English subtitles.)
130- City Lovers, Country Lovers: The Gordimer Stories
New York, 121 minutes
Profile Productions, 1984
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
In City Lovers, a middle-aged white geologist and a younger, light-skinned
black cashier develop an intimate relationship. In Country Lovers,
a young white boy and a black girl grow up together and become lovers.
In both stories, the lovers are made to suffer the legal consequences
of their violation of the Immorality Act, the South African law
which forbids sexual and social relationships between the races.
Based on stories by Nadine Gordimer.
131- Clando = Clandestine
San Francisco, CA, 96 minutes
California Newsreel, 1996
VIDREC 791.4372 C529
Sobgui, a former computer programmer, drives a "clando"
cab in the streets of Douala, Cameroon. He is clandestine, not just
because his cab is unlicensed, but because he is hiding from his
past. When a radical political group involves him in the revenge
slaying of an informer, Sobgui knows that it is time to get out
of Douala. He gets his chance when he is asked to find a wealthy
villager's son in Germany. The film represents a dilemma facing
educated Africans: whether to work to change the autocratic regimes
at home or to seek their fortunes abroad. (In French with English
subtitles.)
132- Classified People
New York, NY, 55 minutes
Filmakers Library, 1987
VIDREC 320.560968 C569
This documentary portrays a South African family divided by the
cruel absurdity of racial classification. It becomes apparent at
a family gathering that racial prejudice has undermined familial
ties. The New York Times called it "a superior documentary,
whose charm does not dilute its political message."
133- The Closed Doors = Al Abwab al Moghlak = Les portes fermée
Seattle, WA, 105 minutes
Arab Film Distribution, 1999
Not cataloged, December 2003
The Closed Doors touches on several taboos in contemporaty Egyptian
society, examining their social and political implications. Set
during the Gulf War, it tells the story of Mohamad, a highly impressionable
young man who embraces fundamentalist ideas as a way of dealing
with the confusion of adolescence and sexual awakening. This powerful
first feature by one of Egypt's most promising directors tackles
complex themes like oppression, virtue, the love ideal, and violence
in an uncompromising way. (Arabic with English subtitles.)
134- Colonialism: A Case Study, Namibia
Chicago, 21 minutes
Journal Films, 1975
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
The film traces the tragic history of the Namibian people from
the harsh German colonial era to the recent attempts to achieve
independence from South Africa.
135- Come Back, Africa
New York, 83 minutes (1989 video release of 1959 motion picture)
Mystic Fire Video, 1989
VIDREC 968.221 C734
This film, shot secretly in South Africa to reveal the oppression
inherent in living under apartheid, tells the story of a family
forced by famine to leave the back country to work in the mines
near Johannesburg. The film features scenes of "life"
in Sophiatown. It includes footage of men performing a circle dance
to wind instruments and street musicians performing penny whistle
and guitar music. "Featuring the people of Johannesburg."
Miriam Makeba sings two songs.
136- Communications: The Printed Word
Northbrook, IL, 18 minutes
MTI Film & Video, [198-?]
VIDREC 686.209 C737
Traces the history of printing from the beginning of papermaking
in Egypt and examines the major advancements in the art of printing.
137- Le Complot
Los Angeles, CA, 120 minutes
Connoisseur Video Collection, 1990.
VIDREC 791.4372 C738
After DeGaulle granted Algeria its independence, millions opposed
him. A group of disenchanted Army officers planned a daring jailbreak
of their imprisoned leader leading to an explosive three-way cat-and-mouse
game. (French with English subtitles.)
138- The Continent of Africa
New York, 15 minutes
McGraw-Hill Films, 1966
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
This film covers the four major regions of Africa -- dry north,
forests of the west, industrial south, and highlands of the east.
It reveals differences in landforms and climate and shows the African
people and their diversified ways of life.
139- Cotton Growing and Spinning
New York, 6 minutes
International Film Foundation, 1967
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
Shows methods of growing, rolling, and spinning cotton among the
Dogon people of the Niger River.
140- Covered: The Hejab in Cairo, Egypt
New York, 25 minutes
Women Make Movies, 1995
VIDREC 391.43 C838
This absorbing documentary offers a rare opportunity to examine
the restoration of veiling in modern-day Egypt and the reasons for
its pervasiveness through the eyes of women affected by this custom.
In unique interviews with women of different ages and backgrounds,
Covered reveals that Islamic tradition, religious fundamentalism,
and growing nationalism are not solely responsible for decisions
to wear the hejab (head scarf). As timely as it is compelling, the
film shows how complex causes account for a phenomenon that is poorly
understood outside the Muslim world. (In English with parts in Arabic
with English subtitles.)
141- Cows of Dolo Ken Paye: Resolving Conflicts among the Kpelle
New York, 32 minutes
BFA Educational Media, 1970
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
Documents the coexistence of traditional life patterns and Western
adaptations in the Liberian village of Fokwele.
142- Cry Freedom
Universal City, CA, 157 minutes (2 videodiscs)
MCA Home Video, 1988
VIDREC 791.4372 C889
This feature film tells the story of black activist Stephen Biko
and white newspaper editor Donald Woods, played by Denzel Washington
and Kevin Kline.
143- Cry Freetown
London, 28 minutes
Insight News Television, 2000
VIDREC 966.404 C889
Award-winning cameraman Sorious Samura returns to Sierra Leone
to expose the horror of his country's civil war. In January 1999,
the rebel forces attacked Freetown, the capital, killing thousands
of civilians.
Cuba and Angola, see Respuesta a la escalada sudafricana
144- The Curse of King Tut
New York, 50 minutes
A&E Television Networks, 1998
The VIDREC 932.014 C938
Explores the facts and legends behind the deadly curse of King
Tut.
145- The Cutting Edge of Progress
[Developing World]
Milton Keynes, England, 24 minutes
Open University, 1994
VIDREC 338.9 D492
Filmed in Zimbabwe, the program explores the impact on the Tonga
people of the construction of the Kariba Dam and the events in its
aftermath.
146- Dagbamba Praise Name Dance
Crown Point, IN, 32 minutes
White Cliffs Media Co., 1990
VIDREC M1838.G4 L86D23
Studio performances by Abubakari Lunna of West African "talking
drum" music and dancing.
147- Dakan
San Francisco, CA, 87 minutes
California Newsreel, 1997
VIDREC 791.436353 D149
This is probably the first feature film on homosexuality from sub-Saharan
Africa. It deals with the "coming out" of two men in love
and the severe social consequences of this for them. (In French
and Malinké with English subtitles.)
148- The Dance of the Spirits
Iowa City, 28 minutes
University of Iowa, 1988
VIDREC 391.43409662 D195
African masks seen as museum pieces do not convey the power and
beauty that they do in their indigenous environments. This film
shows African masks from the country of Burkina Faso in West Africa
in their proper context, the ritual dances of the people of this
region. (Created by Christopher Roy and the School of Art and Art
History, University of Iowa.)
149- Dancing
W. Long Beach, NJ, 8 videocassettes, 58 minutes each
Kultur International Films, 1993
VIDREC 793.3 D1956k
Probes the traditions of dance in communities around the world
-- from the often misunderstood waltz to the eloquent gestures of
an Asante court dancer in Ghana, and from the latest hip-hop in
Morocco to a ballet class in Russia and a modern dance rehearsal
in New York.
150- The Dancing Lion: An African Folktale, with an Introduction
to the Cross Rhythms of African Music
Studio City, California, 11 minutes
FilmFair Communications, 1978
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
Discusses African rhythms and demonstrates how each of the twelve
beats sounds. Illustrates the role of music in African storytelling
by having children clap and chant responses as musicologist Andrew
Tracy relates a tale of a dancing lion.
151- Death on the Nile: Struggle for Peace and the Assassination
of Anwar Sadat
Oak Forest, IL, 60 minutes
MPI Home Video, 1989
VIDREC 962.05 Sa1wd
This documentary tells the story of former Egyptian president Anwar
Sadat who turned his back on the history and wishes of the nation
he led to begin the struggle for peace in the Middle East, losing
his life in the process.
152- The Debt Crisis: An African Dilemma
New York, 20 minutes
First Run Icarus Films, 1988
VIDREC 330.96894 D354
Examination of the impact debt has had on Zambia and the policy
decisions its government must make presenting an example of one
African nation's efforts to adapt to the ever-changing international
economy.
153- Debt Crisis: New Perspectives
New York, 55 minutes
Filmakers Library, 1989
VIDREC 332.042 D354
Most developing countries, having borrowed heavily in the 1970s,
find that they are still in debt. This film gives the perspective
of ministers of finance, the directors of the World Bank and International
Monetary Fund, and others. They blame the problem on industrial
nations and large export markets which do not consider the structural
dilemmas inherited from colonization which arose from economic and
political policies set during those periods.
154- The Debt Police
Oley, PA, 24 minutes
Bullfrog Films, 2000
VIDREC 967.61044 D354
Part 29 of a series on how the globalized world economy affects
ordinary people. Uganda has recently benefitted from a debt relief
initiative, but in a country where corruption is rife, is this relief
really going to reach the poor? This program is filmed in rural
Uganda with the Uganda Debt Network, an NGO working to ensure that
the aid does reach the poor to improve their lives, and reports
on the thriving anti-corruption movement that has sprung up, with
popular theater and campaigning school children. (In English and
native languages with English voiceovers.)
155- Decolonization (About the United Nations)
New York, 18 minutes
United Nations Publications, 1991
VIDREC 341.28 Ab76
This video follows the progress of decolonization since 1945, focusing
on the United Nations' pivotal role in bringing independence to
colonized peoples.
156- Deep Hearts
New York, 53 minutes
Phoenix Films, 1980
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
This film is an ethnographic portrayal of the Bororo people of
Niger, showing an annual ritual dance, which symbolizes their beliefs
about containing and controlling their feelings of love.
Defending the Spirit see Booknotes
157- Delta Force
London, 49 minutes
Television Trust for the Environment, 1995
VIDREC 338.2728 D388
A documentary made before the judicial murder of the Nigerian writer
and human rights activist Ken Saro-Wiwa in November 1995, Delta
Force tells the story of the non-violent efforts of the Ogoni people
to halt 30 years of environmental damage, suffering, and inequality
on the Niger Delta. Delta Force opens with the arrest of Saro-Wiwa
and the subsequent implementation of "Operation Restore"
in Ogoniland -- the military campaign of terror waged against the
Ogoni people in a attempt to suppress their environmental campaign
against oil drilling by Shell International. It also includes interview
excerpts with Ken Wiwa, son of Ken Saro-Wiwa. (Dialogue in Engish
and a Nigerian language with English subtitles.)
158- Desert Caravan
New York, 13 minutes
NBC Educational Enterprises, 1971
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
Relates the adventures of a twelve-year old nomad on his first
journey with a camel caravan across the Sahara Desert showing a
way of life that is difficult in an exotic yet hostile environment.
159- Desert Nomads: French Morocco
New York, 20 minutes
United World Films, 1949
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
The film portrays the life of Moroccan nomads, shows their home
life, trading activities, and their dependence on the camel.
160- Le Destin
New York, 129 minutes
New Yorker Video, 1999
VIDREC 791.43655 D474
When a disciple of 12th-century philosopher Averroes is burned
at the stake for heresy, his young son Joseph journeys to Andalusia
to study with his father's mentor. There he joins Averroes' disciples
uniting against an evil sheik intent upon destroying the philosopher's
work. (In Arabic with English subtitles.)
161- Destination -- Cameroon
Washington, DC, 20 minutes
Peace Corps, World Wise Schools, [1995?]
VIDREC 967.1104 D474
Also included in A Peace Corps Mosaic
VIDREC 304.2 P313
Describes daily life in Cameroon as experienced by Peace Corps
volunteers who live and work there.
162- Destination -- Lesotho
Washington, DC, 20 minutes
World Wise Schools [1995?]
VIDREC 968.85032 D474
Also included in A Peace Corps Mosaic
VIDREC 304.2 P313
Describes daily life in Lesotho as experienced by Peace Corps volunteers
who live and work there.
163- Destination -- Senegal
Washington, DC, 15 minutes
Peace Corps, World Wise School, [1996?]
VIDREC 966.305 D474
Also included in A Peace Corps Mosaic
VIDREC 304.2 P313
Describes daily life in Senegal as experienced by Peace Corps volunteers
who live and work there.
Developing world see Breaking Out; Cutting Edge of Progress; Gender
Matters; Mozambique Under Attack; Packaging Culture; The Poverty
Complex
164- Diamonds and Rust
Brooklyn, NY, 73 minutes
First Run/Icarus Films, 2001
VIDREC 322.382 D541
On the trawler The Spirit of Namibia, moored off the coast of Namibia,
diamond mining goes on around the clock. The supply of the coveted
little diamonds on the ocean floor seems endless, but their extraction
is muddied by politics and fraught with racial tension. Directors
Adi Barash and Ruthie Shatz received permission to film everyday
life on The Spirit of Namibia from diamond exporter De Beers, but
the result -- which shows fraying tempers, racist attitudes, a deteriorating
vessel and front office indifference -- hardly flatters the company.
(Mostly in English, with some Hebrew and Spanish; all dialogue is
subtitled in English.)
Different but Equal see Africa: The Story of a Continent
165- Dignity: African Women in Crisis
Nairobi, Kenya, 26 minutes
Ace Communications, 1992
VIDREC 305.42 D569
Produced for the United Nations Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM),
the message of this video is that African women bear the brunt of
every crisis but that their dignity remains. The video shows the
resilience of African women in the face of tragedies, such as the
death of loved ones, rape, and lack of food for their families.
Also discussed is how the UNIFEM/AFWIC program has helped women
to learn new skills in agriculture, construction, and trade.
Disappearing World Series see Asante Market Women; In Search of
Cool Ground; The Kwegu; Masai Manhood; Masai Women; Mende; Witchcraft
Among the Azande; Wodaabe
166- The Discarded People
San Francisco, CA, 30 minutes
California Newsreel, 1981
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
The film examines the damage done to black and colored people by
apartheid policies of the South African government. It focuses on
the policy of deportation to homelands and the impoverished conditions
in these regions.
167- Discovering the Music of Africa
Huntsville, TX, 22 minutes
Educational Video, [198-?]
Music Library: VIDREC ML3760 D47
Describes music and rhythms of Africa, especially Ghana, and how
they are used both as music and means of communication. Demonstrates
the complex rhythmic music of the bells, rattles, and drums; shows
several traditional dances.
168- Disillusion
Greenbelt, MD, 110 minutes
Majestic Pictures, 1991
VIDREC 791.4372 D6312
Disillusion takes us on a journey through the gambit of the social,
the psychological, and the political spectrum of an African young
man who comes to America to further his education. He runs into
many obstacles which include: an educational system that looks down
on him, frustrating job situations, social acceptance by the African-American
community, and a relationship with an African-American woman. It
is through these ordeals (disillusionment) that he gains a new sense
of self-consciousness.
169- Dôlè
San Francisco, CA, 80 minutes
California Newsreel, 2001
VIDREC 791.43655 D687
The action takes place in Libreville, the capital of Gabon. This
is where Mougler and his friends Baby Lee, Joker, Akson, and Bezingo,
four fifteen-year-old boys, live. These boys have to fend for themselves,
except for Mougler who lives with Maradou, his mother. The gang
is tired of thieving and is full of dreams of more ambitious jobs.
The opportunity is given to them with the extremely popular betting
kiosks in Dôlè. (In French with English subtitles.)
170- A Door to the Sky = Bab Al-Sama Maftou
Seattle, WA, 107 minutes
Arab Film Distribution, 1989
Not cataloged, December 2003
Nadia, a young Moroccan émigré, returns from Paris
to Fez to visit her dying father. At his funeral, she is overcome
by the voice of Karina chanting the Koran. A powerful friendship
develops between the two women as they decide to turn the father's
palace into a Muslim women's shelter. This is a Sufi tale told in
a metaphoric language. It is also the first North African film to
address social and economic changes proposed by a spiritual Moslem
woman on a quest to preserve her cultural and religious identity.
(Arabic with English subtitles.)
171- Down to Earth
Johannesburg, South Africa, 30 minutes
Seipone Productions, 2001
Not cataloged, December 2003
The World Summit on Sustainable Development. Episode 1: Food; Episode
2: Energy; Episode 3: Water; Episode 4: The World Summit.
172- The Drilling Fields
Nigeria, 24 minutes
Green peace, 1995
VIDREC 363.73962 D832
A documentary by unnamed Nigerians about environmental pollution
by Shell Oil in Nigeria, in particular the land of the Ogoni people.
It is also about the repression of the people by the military government.
Ken Saro-Wiwa is shown as one of the leaders helping the people
in peaceful demonstrations against the government.
Drums of Dagbon see Repercussions
173- The Earth that Feeds Us
[Journey to Understanding]
Evanston, IL, 15 minutes
Beacon Films, c1990
VIDREC 330.960329 Ea76
Discusses Africa's progress in dealing with the problems of soil
erosion and deforestation. However, environmental solutions have
presented new economic problems. Since many African industries revolve
around agriculture and deforestation, a balance is necessary to
achieve environmental and economic conditions.
174- East Africa Tropical Highlands
New York, 15 minutes
McGraw-Hill Films, 1966
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
The film portrays geographical features and developing industry
and agriculture. It discusses the importance of railroads, the use
of park preserves, and the need for increased education.
175- East African Instruments (parts 1 & 2)
Lincoln, NE, 17 minutes
GPN [Great Plains National Instructional Television Library], c1978
Music Library: VIDREC MT655 E271 (part 1)
VIDREC MT655 E272 (part 2)
Philip Faini, professor of music, and other musicians demonstrate
various East African instruments, such as maracas, box rattles,
and different kinds of drums. Next Faini explains the complexity
of an African xylophone played by three people. Then the band puts
it all together in dance music from Uganda. In part 2, Special guest
Father Charles Lwanga leads the band members in singing and clapping,
an essential part of African music, while they play.
176- Ebola, the Plague Fighters
South Burlington, VT, 60 minutes
WGBH Video, 1996
VIDREC 614.57 Eb72
An investigation into the deadly Ebola virus and the 1995 outbreak
of the disease in Kikwit, Democratic Republic of Congo.
177- Echo of the Elephants
New York, 60 minutes
Thirteen/WNET, c1992.
VIDREC 599.674 Ec44
Follows a family of African elephants led by their matriarch, Echo,
whose newest calf, Ely, was born unable to walk. Set in Kenya's
Amboseli National Park where internationally recognized expert Cynthia
Moss has been studying elephant life for over 20 years; the film
chronicles 18 dramatic months in the lives of Echo and her family.
178- Ecology of an African River: the Mwaleshi
New York, 18 minutes
ACI Films, Inc., 1975
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
This film shows the many forms of life which live in and along
an unspoiled river in central Africa and explores their relationships
to each other and to the river which supports them all.
179- The Economy of Africa
Boston, MA, 13 minutes
McGraw-Hill Book Co., 1966
16mm film, UIUC Cinema Studies collection
This film traces the expanding African economy from its status
in colonial days through its development in newly independent countries.
It points out the problems facing these new nations as they struggle
for economic well-being.
180- Egun Gun Performance, Aug. 1990
Seattle, WA, 84 minutes
Seattle Art Museum, 1990
Krannert Art Museum, VIDREC 225
Performance in Osun, Nigeria.
181- Egypt: A Gift to Civilization
St. Laurent, Que., 90 minutes
Madacy Entertainment Group, 1996
VIDREC 932 Eg982
A video trip from ancient dynasties to modern democracy in Egypt,
|