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Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese at an event for L'indomptable feu du printemps (2019)

News

Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese

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Memento International rebrands as Paradise City Sales
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Paris-based sales outfit Memento International has rebranded as Paradise City Sales and will operate under Emilie Georges and Naima Abed’s Paris and London-based Paradise City banner moving forward.

The sales arm aims to board projects from early stages produced by Paradise City like Anthony Chen’s 2023 Sundance title Drift starring Cynthia Erivo, and Hailey Gates’ Sundance Jury Grand Prize-winning Atropia, on which Paradise City is a producer. It will continue to acquire some 10 films per year from independent producers and balance emerging talent with established filmmakers.

Paradise City Sales is at EFM with Hungarian filmmaker Lili Horvát’s English-language...
See full article at ScreenDaily
  • 2/17/2025
  • ScreenDaily
Asian movies at the 75th Berlinale
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The 75th Berlin International Film Festival will take place from 13 to 23 February. This year, the festival held in the capital of Germany since 1951 will present more than 200 films, of which 60 are produced or co-produced by Asian countries.

1001 Frames (2025) by Mehrnoush Alia (World Premiere)

Iran, USA, 87′

In the studio of a well-known director, female actors audition for the role of Scheherazade in “A Thousand and One Nights”. However, they gradually realise that the director has more in mind than just casting the leading role.

A Letter to David (2025) by Tom Shoval (World Premiere)

Israel, USA, 74′

In 2013, David Cunio starred in Tom Shoval’s debut feature “Youth”, which revolved around two brothers kidnapping a schoolmate. In 2023, Cunio was abducted and since then, he has been held hostage in Gaza. With this documentary, Shoval sends him a cinematic letter.

A Story about Fire (2025) by Li Wenyu (World Premiere)

China, 85′

The legend of Ran...
See full article at AsianMoviePulse
  • 2/6/2025
  • by Tobiasz Dunin
  • AsianMoviePulse
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Qatar’s Doha Film Institute backs 47 projects in latest funding round
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Sofia Alaoui’sTarfayaand post-apocalyptic UK co-productionIn Memory Of Times To Come are among the 47 projects to receive support fromQatar’s Doha Film Institute (Dfi) in its 2024 autumn funding round.

Thirty of the projects are feature fiction and documentary films, with 13 shorts, three TV series and one web series.

Scroll down for the full list of selected features

Tarfaya is the second feature from French-Moroccan filmmaker Alaoui, after her Sundance special jury prize winner Animalia. It sees a mysterious sleeping epidemic in a remote Moroccan town test a dedicated doctor’s resolve.

The project was developed through the Red Sea Film...
See full article at ScreenDaily
  • 1/29/2025
  • ScreenDaily
Berlinale 2025 Adds Films by Bong Joon Ho, Ira Sachs, Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese & More
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Ahead of the Berlinale 2025 taking place February 13-23, they’ve unveiled their lineups for Berlinale Special, Panorama, Generation and Forum sections. Highlights include confirmation of Bong Joon Ho’s Mickey 17 alongside Ira Sachs’ Peter Hujar’s Day, Ancestral Visions of the Future from This Is Not a Burial, It’s a Resurrection director Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese, a documentary on the making of Shoah, a new Jacob Elordi-led series from Justin Kurzel, and more.

See the lineup below via Deadline and check back for the competition lineup next week.

Berlinale Special

Ancestral Visions of the Future

by Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese | with Siphiwe Nzima, Sobo Bernard, Zaman Mathejane, Mochesane Edwin Kotsoane, Rehauhetsoe Ernest Kotsoane

France / Lesotho / Germany / Saudi Arabia 2025

Berlinale Special | World premiere | Documentary form

A poetic allegory of the filmmaker Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese’s childhood, an ode to cinema and an inner nod to his mother. Through fragmented narratives and mythic imagery,...
See full article at The Film Stage
  • 1/16/2025
  • by Jordan Raup
  • The Film Stage
Justin Kurzel Series ‘The Narrow Road To The Deep North’ Starring Jacob Elordi Among Titles Added To Berlinale Lineup
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Aussie filmmaker Justin Kurzel’s series adaptation of Richard Flanagan’s Booker Prize-winning novel The Narrow Road to the Deep North, starring Jacob Elordi, will screen at this year’s Berlin Film Festival.

The Narrow Road to the Deep North was among several titles added to Berlin’s lineup this morning.

The festival describes the series as a “riveting new Australian drama” about a WWII hero haunted by his past. The show will screen as a Berlinale Special Gala. Also in Specials strand is The Thing with Feathers starring Benedict Cumberbatch. The pic screens at Berlin following a debut bow at Sundance and is from filmmaker Dylan Southern. The pic is an adaption of Max Porter’s novel about a grieving father wrestling with the sudden death of his wife while also raising their young children. As previously reported, Bong Joon Ho’s Mickey 17 will also screen. Scroll down...
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 1/16/2025
  • by Zac Ntim
  • Deadline Film + TV
Dennis Ruh
Egyptian Film “Aisha Can’t Fly Away” Wins Top Prize at Venice Film Festival
Dennis Ruh
The Final Cut in Venice program, which supports post-production of films from Africa and the Arab world, recently concluded its 12th edition. Morad Mostafa’s feature film debut “Aisha Can’t Fly Away” earned the top prize. The movie tells the story of a Somali woman caring for her elderly parents in Cairo as she navigates the city’s social dynamics. Mostafa received the €5,000 La Biennale di Venezia Prize in recognition of his outstanding work.

The jury that selected the prize consisted of industry veterans Wayne Borg, Monica Ciarli, and Dennis Ruh. They praised Mostafa’s “powerful and authentic” storytelling and “distinct cinematic voice.” While a first feature film, the jury said the director showed “confident direction” and left “a strong impression” with the film’s “gritty realism and attention to detail.”

Mostafa’s film also obtained additional support from organizations like the Cinémathèque Afrique of the Institut Français, Rai Cinema,...
See full article at Gazettely
  • 9/5/2024
  • by Naser Nahandian
  • Gazettely
‘Aisha Can’t Fly Away’ Wins at Final Cut as Venice Production Bridge Wraps
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The 12th edition of Final Cut in Venice, the industry program supporting films in post-production from Africa and Arab countries, came to a wrap with an awards ceremony that saw Egyptian filmmaker Morad Mostafa’s “Aisha Can’t Fly Away” take the La Biennale di Venezia Prize for a film in post-production, worth €5,000.

Morad’s feature debut, which has previously been through the Doha Film Institute’s Qumra Lab, tells the story of a Somali woman caring for her elderly parents in Cairo while witnessing the tensions between the different ethnic groups who make up the city’s society.

This year’s jury was composed of Wayne Borg of Neom, Monica Ciarli of Minerva Pictures, and former director of the European Film Market Dennis Ruh. In their statement, the jury labelled Mostafa’s story “powerful and authentic,” adding: “Despite being a first feature film, it showcased confident direction and a distinct cinematic voice.
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 9/5/2024
  • by Rafa Sales Ross
  • Variety Film + TV
Thanks to Max, You Can Finally Watch One of the Best Dramas of the Last 10 Years
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In the mountains of the small African nation of Lesotho, a village with two names experiences a miracle. An 80-year-old woman named Mantoa has lost the last surviving member of her family, her son, to a mining accident. This unspeakable tragedy leads to a rebirth of Mantoa's village and a newfound sense of identity. This Is Not a Burial, It's a Resurrection is a chronicle of life, death and new beginnings in Lesotho. Directed by Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese, This Is Not a Burial has rightly earned praise from critics for its transcendent story. Now with the film streaming on Max, it is easier than ever to watch one of the best dramas of the 2010s.
See full article at Collider.com
  • 8/27/2024
  • by Will Sorg
  • Collider.com
Neom’s Wayne Borg & Former EFM Head Dennis Ruh To Headline Final Cut In Venice Jury
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Exclusive: Managing Director of Neom Media Industries Wayne Borg, Monica Ciarli of Minerva Pictures, and former EFM head Dennis Ruh will serve on the jury of the Venice Film Festival’s work-in-progress event Final Cut In Venice.

The Final Cut in Venice programme will run from September 1-3. The first two days are dedicated to the works-in-progress screenings. On the third day, one-on-one meetings are organized and the awards are presented in the afternoon. The jury will hand out a prize of €5,000 for the best film in post-production.

The seven selected productions include four fiction features: Morad Mostafa’s Aisha Can’t Fly Away (Egypt), Nadim Tabet’s In This Darkness I See You (Lebanon), Mohamed Siam’s My Father’s Scent (Egypt), and Ique Langa’s The Prophet (Mozambique).

Related: Venice Lineup Interview: Festival Chief Alberto Barbera Says ‘Joker 2’ Is “One Of The Most Daring Films In Recent...
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 8/14/2024
  • by Zac Ntim
  • Deadline Film + TV
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Berlinale’s World Cinema Fund backs 10 projects including ‘Aisha Can’t Fly Away’
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The Berlinale’s World Cinema Fund (Wcf) has backed 10 feature projects in its 40th session, at a total of €260,000.

The latest funding pot has awarded eight production and two distribution grants, to projects from Algeria, Argentina, Brazil, Cameroon, Egypt, Iran, Lesotho, Nepal and Sudan.

Scroll down for the full list of projects

Aisha Can’t Fly Away, the debut feature of Egyptian filmmaker Morad Mostafa, received €25,000. Mostafa participated in the 2024 Berlinale Talents, was named a Screen Arab Star of Tomorrow in 2023, and will take part in the Final Cut in Venice lab with his project in September after shooting this summer.
See full article at ScreenDaily
  • 7/24/2024
  • ScreenDaily
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Venice Final Cut lab projects include Morad Mostafa’s ‘Aisha Can’t Fly Away’
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Morad Mostafa’s Aisha Can’t Fly Away is among seven projects selected for the Final Cut in Venice lab for work-in-progress titles from Africa and the Middle East.

The film, which is gearing up to shoot this summer, tells the story of a Somali woman who cares for her elderly parents while witnessing the tensions between the different groups who make up her city’s African society.

Scroll down for the full list of projects

It will be a feature debut for Egyptian filmmaker Mostafa, who was selected as a Screen Arab Star of Tomorrow last year.

Aisha Can...
See full article at ScreenDaily
  • 7/11/2024
  • ScreenDaily
Memento International Picks Up Cannes’ Un Certain Regard-Bound ‘Omen’ (Exclusive)
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Memento International is set to represent global rights to “Omen,” the feature debut of Belgian-Congolese artist-turned filmmaker Baloji which is slated to world premiere at Cannes’ Un Certain Regard.

Baloji previously directed several short films including “Zombies” which played at the BFI London film festival. Blurring the lines between reality and the realm of dreams, “Omen” follows Kofi, who return to his birthplace after being ostracized by his family. The movie explores the weight of beliefs on one’s destiny through four characters accused of being witches and sorcerers, all of them intertwined and guiding each other into the phantasmagoria of Africa.

The film stars Marc Zinga Lucie Debay (“Our Men”) and Eliane Umuhire (“Birds Are Singing in Kigali”).

“I like to describe ‘Omen’ as a chimerical film, an ode to the imaginary and the visceral, evoking the spirits of the departed as much as the boundless energy of childhood,...
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 4/21/2023
  • by Elsa Keslassy
  • Variety Film + TV
Venice Film Festival, Netflix & The Gotham Institute Team Up For ‘Next Generation’ Program At New York’s Paris Theater
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Exclusive: Venice Film Festival, Netflix and The Gotham Film & Media Institute are teaming up on a program of movies at iconic New York venue, the Paris Theater. Scroll down for program lineup in full.

Titled Venice Film Festival Presents: Next Generation, the four day event (April 20-23) will showcase films from the first ten years of La Biennale di Venezia’s Biennale College Cinema.

Screenings will be accompanied by in-depth discussions pairing new filmmakers with established directors, producers, and writers. The opening night will feature a screening of mystery-thriller Our Father, The Devil with remarks from Venice Director Alberto Barbera and Head of Programme Savina Neirotti. Indie Spirit winner Nikyatu Jusu, whose Sundance film Nanny was picked up by Amazon and Blumhouse, will serve as moderator for the opening night discussion with director Ellie Foumbi.

Biennale College Cinema is an incubator program for low-budget films by emerging filmmakers. Among...
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 3/30/2023
  • by Andreas Wiseman
  • Deadline Film + TV
Michelle Yeoh at an event for Star Trek: Discovery (2017)
The Criterion Channel Announce March Lineup: Isabelle Huppert, Michelle Yeoh, Pre-Code, Lars von Trier & More
Michelle Yeoh at an event for Star Trek: Discovery (2017)
It is my experience that one gets a far richer, stranger cinema education in pursuing the careers of actors, that group defined first by (assuming luck shines upon them) two or three era-defining films and then so much that dictates their industry—pet projects, contractual obligations, called-in favors alimony payments, auteur one-offs, and on and on. Few embody that deluge of circumstance better than Michelle Yeoh and Isabelle Huppert, both of whom are receiving spotlights in March. The former’s is a who’s-who of Hong Kong talent, new favorites (The Heroic Trio), items we can at least say are of interest (Trio‘s not-great sequel Executioners), etc.

Huppert’s series runs longer, and notwithstanding certain standards that have long sat on the channel it adds some heavy hitters: Hong’s In Another Country, Cimino’s Heaven’s Gate, Breillat’s Abuse of Weakness, Hansen-Løve’s Things to Come. And, of course,...
See full article at The Film Stage
  • 2/22/2023
  • by Nick Newman
  • The Film Stage
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Blu-ray Review: This Is Not A Burial, It's A Resurrection, The Poetics of Resistance
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With only one or two 'big' names known, even among cinephines, cinema from sub-saharan Africa has often been neglected both on the festival and the art house cinema circuit. Perhaps also because of the way the filmmakers use the tools of cinema, often so outside what we're used to from North American, European, and Asian cinema. It's a different way of storytelling, one that asks us to consider the web-like connection between storyteller and story, land and character, fiction and fact. These are not seperated categories, but each a part of each other. Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese's sophomore feature, This is Not a Burial, it's a Resurrection is a film that asks for, and has no trouble receiving, our undivided attention. The story might seem...

[Read the whole post on screenanarchy.com...]...
See full article at Screen Anarchy
  • 1/16/2023
  • Screen Anarchy
Tim Roth and Vicky Krieps in Bergman Island (2021)
What’s New on DVD/Blu-ray in January: ‘Bergman Island,’ ‘The Return of Tanya Tucker,’ Jackie Chan and More
Tim Roth and Vicky Krieps in Bergman Island (2021)
New Release Wall

“Bergman Island” (The Criterion Collection): Writer-director Mia Hansen-Løve’s seventh feature is graceful and complex, a story about stories and the sometimes fragile connections between partners and friends. A couple travel to Fårö, Sweden, where Ingmar Bergman lived and worked, in order to work on their own respective filmmaking projects. There they discover more about themselves than they anticipated. The Blu-ray includes an essay from critic Devika Girish; a short film, “Bergman’s Ghosts,” made during production by actor Gabe Klinger; and interviews with Krieps and Hansen-Løve.

Also available:

“Black Adam” (Warner Bros): Dwayne Johnson is the DC Comics anti-hero, freed from his tomb after 5000 years, now ready to deliver his own version of justice.

“Bones and All” (Warner Bros): The latest from “Call Me By Your Name” director Luca Guadagnino is a romantic horror film about cannibals in love — it’s as divisive...
See full article at The Wrap
  • 1/12/2023
  • by Alonso Duralde
  • The Wrap
Theo Montoya’s ‘Anhell69’ wins top prize at Dok Leipzig
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The film explores the young queer generation of Colombia.

German director Theo Montoya’s documentary Anhell69 has won the €10,000 Golden Dove prize of the international competition of the Dok Leipzig documentary and animation film festival in Germany.

Austria’s Square Eyes is handling international sales on the film.

The festival took place from October 17-23 in Germany.

Inspired by the director’s own past, Anhell69 explores the young queer generation of Colombia and the violence of the city they reside in. It is a co-production between Colombia, Romania, France and Germany.

The film had its world premiere in Venice’s...
See full article at ScreenDaily
  • 10/24/2022
  • by Ellie Calnan
  • ScreenDaily
San Sebastian Film Festival Winners: ‘The Kings Of The World’ Takes Golden Shell
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Colombian filmmaker Laura Mora has clinched the Golden Shell in the main competition of the 70th San Sebastian Film Festival with her latest feature The Kings of the World (Los reyes del mundo).

Billed as a subversive tale of disobedience, friendship, and dignity, the film follows five boys living on the streets of Medellín who set out on a journey in search of the promised land. The film is a Colombian co-production with Luxembourg, France, Mexico, and Norway.

This is the third year running that a film helmed by a woman has taken home the Golden Shell following Dea Kulumbegashvili’s Beginning in 2020 and Alina Grigore’s Blue Moon last year. This is also the first time a Colombian production has picked up San Sebastian’s top prize in the festival’s seven decades.

In other main competition awards, Japanese writer Genki Kawamura picked up the Silver Shell for Best...
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 9/24/2022
  • by Zac Ntim
  • Deadline Film + TV
Vive le Cinéma: How Tabakalera is Helping to Broaden the San Sebastian Festival
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“Vive le cinéma!” goes the call from Tabakalera, International Centre of Contemporary Culture, at this year’s San Sebastián International Film Festival (Ssiff).

The Centre’s exhibition hall plays host to four cinematographic installations made by leading global filmmakers, a project which sees them transform their usual cinema-based practice into a more expansive and experimental gallery space.

The exhibition at Tabakalera marks a continuation of the series which began at the Eye Filmmuseum in Amsterdam last year in collaboration with the International Film Festival Rotterdam. Two works from the 2021 exhibition by Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese and Jia Zhang-ke will be on display again in San Sebastián, alongside two new productions from Georgian filmmaker Dea Kulumbegashvili (“Beginning”) and Spanish director Isaki Lacuesta.

“Our main mission is to promote artistic production and to act as a platform to connect a wide audience to the arts of our time,” says Tabakalera’s Cultural Director Clara Montero.
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 9/20/2022
  • by Caitlin Quinlan
  • Variety Film + TV
Glenn Close cancels San Sebastian jury president role due to “family emergency”
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Argentinian producer Matias Mosteirin will take over as jury president.

US actress Glenn Close has withdrawn from her role as jury president of this week’s San Sebastian Film Festival, due to a ‘family emergency’.

Argentinian producer Matias Mosteirin, already a jury member, will take over Close’s role, with no replacement jury member incoming.

A statement issued by the festival said Close “conveyed to the Festival her regrets for not being able to attend a duty to which she felt very committed.”

It also relayed a message from Close, who said, “I deeply regret that I will not be...
See full article at ScreenDaily
  • 9/13/2022
  • by Ben Dalton
  • ScreenDaily
Glenn Close Pulls Out Of San Sebastian Jury Due To Family Emergency
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Glenn Close no longer will preside over the San Sebastian jury and has canceled her trip to the festival due to a family emergency.

“I deeply regret that I will not be able to take part in the Festival as there has been a family emergency for which I must stay home,” Close said in a statement. “I apologize to the Festival, the Jury, the filmmakers, the Donostia honorees, and the festival audience, that I will not be there to celebrate with you all.”

Argentinian producer Matías Mosteirín, who already was announced as part of the jury, will serve as the president. Mosteirin’s feature film as a producer, Bolivia, received the Young Critics Award at the Semaine de la Critique in Cannes. He recently executive produced Marcelo Piñeyro’s series El Reino (The Realm) for Netflix.

The jury will be filled out by French casting director and filmmaker Antoinette Boulat,...
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 9/13/2022
  • by Zac Ntim
  • Deadline Film + TV
Glenn Close Cancels San Sebastian Film Festival Visit Due to Family Emergency
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Glenn Close, who was due to serve as the jury president at the San Sebastian Film Festival, has canceled her trip due to a family emergency.

“I deeply regret that I will not be able to take part in the festival as there has been a family emergency for which I must stay home,” Close said in a statement. “I apologize to the festival, the jury, the filmmakers, the Donostia honorees and the festival audience, that I will not be there to celebrate with you all.”

Just last week, the star of “Fatal Attraction” and “Dangerous Liaisons” posted a video on her social media in which she expressed her enthusiasm about chairing the festival jury, describing it as “a new adventure I’ve never done before.” “I love San Sebastian, people are fantastic, I’m really looking forward to seeing some wonderful films and I’m very excited about meeting my fellow jury members,...
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 9/13/2022
  • by Naman Ramachandran
  • Variety Film + TV
Ulrich Seidl’s ‘Sparta’ Will Premiere at San Sebastian Despite Child Exploitation Allegations (Exclusive)
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Ulrich Seidl’s “Sparta” has been pulled from the Toronto International Film Festival amid allegations of impropriety and child exploitation against the director, but its premiere at next week’s San Sebastian Film Festival will continue as planned, Variety can reveal.

A spokesperson for the Spanish festival tells Variety on behalf of festival management that “Sparta” will remain in competition.

Providing a three-point list explaining their reasoning, San Sebastian said “the festival team assesses the films after their viewing according to their interest and quality” and that the event “does not have the ability to judge how a film has been shot and whether a crime has been committed in the course of the filming. If anyone has any evidence of a crime, they should report it to a judge.”

The statement concludes: “Only a court order would lead us to suspend a scheduled screening.”

This means that “Sparta” is...
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 9/10/2022
  • by Manori Ravindran
  • Variety Film + TV
Glenn Close to lead San Sebastian jury; final competition title revealed
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The festival runs September 16-24.

Glenn Close has been named president of the official selection jury for the 70th San Sebastian International Film Festival.

Close will be joined by French director and casting director Antoinette Boulat; Danish filmmaker Tea Lindeburg; Argentinian producer Matías Mosteirín; Spanish writer Rosa Montero; Mosotho filmmaker Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese and the Icelandic director and screenwriter Hlynur Pálmason.

Wang Chao’s A Woman has also been added to Ssiff’s official selection, becoming the 16th title eligible for the Golden Shell.

The Chinese film is based on Zhang Xiu Zhen’s autobiography Dream and follows an aspiring...
See full article at ScreenDaily
  • 9/2/2022
  • by Ellie Calnan
  • ScreenDaily
Glenn Close To Preside Over San Sebastian Film Festival Jury
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American actress Glenn Close has been announced as the jury president for the Official Section of the 70th San Sebastian Film Festival, running from September 16-24.

Close will be joined by the French casting director and filmmaker Antoinette Boulat, Danish filmmaker Tea Lindeburg, Argentinian producer Matías Mosteirín, the Spanish writer Rosa Montero, Lesotho filmmaker Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese, and the Icelandic director Hlynur Pálmason.

The jury awards the Golden Shell for Best Film and the Silver Shell awards for Best Director, Best Leading Performance, Best Supporting Performance, as well as jury prizes for Cinematography and Screenplay. The Official Awards will be announced and presented at the festival’s Closing Gala on September 24.

Close was last at the Spanish festival with The Wife, which closed out the Official Section in 2017. The film went on to earn Close her eighth Academy Award nomination.

As previously announced, Spanish filmmaker Alberto Rodríguez will open the...
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 9/2/2022
  • by Zac Ntim
  • Deadline Film + TV
Venice’s Final Cut Celebrates 10 Years of Discoveries
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Final Cut, a workshop supporting films in post-production from African and Arab countries – launched by the Venice Film Festival’s industry section, Venice Production Bridge – celebrates its 10th anniversary this week.

Its goals have remained the same, however, as it continues to provide emerging filmmakers with concrete assistance as well as visibility, all the while strengthening Venice’s role as “bridge builder,” says Alessandra Speciale, its curator. The final selection features titles made by directors from nine different countries: Algeria, Jordan, Guinea, Egypt, Lebanon, Morocco, Palestine, Central African Republic and Tunisia.

This year, two additional projects were added to the usual six work-in-progress films, thanks to the France in Focus initiative, supported by Unifrance: Karim Bensalah’s debut “Black Light,” sold internationally by The Party Film Sales, and “The Cemetery of Cinema,” directed by Thierno Souleymane Diallo and marking Guinea’s first presence at the workshop.

Diallo, who has been...
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 9/1/2022
  • by Marta Balaga
  • Variety Film + TV
Africa’s Realness Institute, Netflix select 12 participants for episodic, development schemes (exclusive)
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Six participants on each programme, receiving 2,000 monthly stipend.

African development organisation the Realness Institute has selected 12 participants for its 2022 Episodic Lab and Development Executive Traineeship, in partnership with Netflix.

The six writers selected for the Episodic Lab are: Hussein Kurji with Bushcamp (Kenya), Khanyo Mjamba with Byline (South Africa), Mlilo Mpondo with Bayeti-Visitors (South Africa), Neo Sibiya with Ukushona Kwelanga (The Setting of The Sun) (South Africa), Sandra Madu with From Lagos with Love (Nigeria) and Voline Ogutu with Dilemma (Kenya).

The 12 participants will each receive a monthly stipend of 2,000 from May through July, to cover personal expenses as they...
See full article at ScreenDaily
  • 5/3/2022
  • by Ben Dalton
  • ScreenDaily
The Film Stage’s Top 50 Films of 2021
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For our most comprehensive year-end feature we’re providing a cumulative look at The Film Stage’s favorite films of 2021. We’ve asked contributors to compile ten-best lists with five honorable mentions—a selection of those personal lists will be shared in coming days—and from tallied votes has a top 50 been assembled.

So: without further ado, check out our rundown of 2021 below, our ongoing year-end coverage here (including where to stream many of the below picks), and return in the coming weeks as we look towards 2022.

50. This is Not a Burial, It’s a Resurrection (Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese)

Framed as an epic fable and shot like a myth, Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese’s This is Not a Burial, It’s a Resurrection is another beautiful, tragic diary entry on the history and people of his home country Lesotho. His focus shifts from the metaphorical relationship of Mother, I am Suffocating, This...
See full article at The Film Stage
  • 12/29/2021
  • by The Film Stage
  • The Film Stage
‘The Mother Of All Lies’, ‘Under The Fig Trees’ scoop top prizes at Atlas Workshops
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Marrakech International Film Festival’s project incubator showcased 15 projects in development and nine projects.

Moroccan filmmaker Asmae El Moudir’s The Mother Of All Lies and Tunisian-French director Erige Sehiri’s Under The Fig Trees have won the top post-production prizes at the Marrakech International Film Festival’s Atlas Workshops talent and project incubator.

The films were among 15 projects in development and nine projects in post-production presented in the fourth edition of the workshops, running online from November 22 to 25 and attended by more than 300 international film professionals.

The post-production jury comprised Nuha Eltayeb, director of content acquisitions for the Middle East,...
See full article at ScreenDaily
  • 11/25/2021
  • by Melanie Goodfellow
  • ScreenDaily
Garrett Bradley
The Criterion Channel’s November 2021 Lineup Includes Hamaguchi, Fourteen, Garrett Bradley & More
Garrett Bradley
As 2021 mercifully winds down, the Criterion Channel have a (November) lineup that marks one of their most diverse selections in some time—films by the new masters Ryusuke Hamaguchi and Garrett Bradley, Dan Sallitt’s Fourteen (one of 2020’s best films) couched in a fantastic retrospective, and Criterion editions of old favorites.

Fourteen is featured in “Between Us Girls: Bonds Between Women,” which also includes Céline and Julie, The Virgin Suicides, and Yvonne Rainer’s Privilege. Of equal note are Criterion editions for Ghost World, Night of the Hunter, and (just in time for del Toro’s spin) Nightmare Alley—all stacked releases in their own right.

See the full list of October titles below and more on the Criterion Channel.

300 Nassau, Marina Lameiro, 2015

5 Card Stud, Henry Hathaway, 1968

Alone, Garrett Bradley, 2017

Álvaro, Daniel Wilson, Elizabeth Warren, Alexandra Lazarowich, and Chloe Zimmerman, 2015

America, Garrett Bradley, 2019

Angel Face, Otto Preminger, 1953

Angels Wear White,...
See full article at The Film Stage
  • 10/25/2021
  • by Leonard Pearce
  • The Film Stage
Somalia selects ‘The Gravedigger’s Wife’ as first ever Oscar submission
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Other African submissions so far include Nabil Ayouch’s Casablanca Beats for Morocco.

Finnish-Somali filmmaker Khadar Ayderus Ahmed’s The Gravedigger’s Wife, which world premiered in Cannes Critics’ Week in July, has been selected as Somalia’s first-ever Oscar submission for the 2022 Academy Awards.

Set in Djibouti City in the Horn of Africa, the drama stars Finnish-Somali actor Omar Abdi as a gravedigger on a quest to raise the money for the kidney transplant desperately needed by his beloved wife, played by Canadian-Somali model and actress Yasmin Warsame.

The film’s selection for consideration in the best international film category...
See full article at ScreenDaily
  • 10/7/2021
  • by Melanie Goodfellow
  • ScreenDaily
Dekanalog Buys Foreign Language Pair ‘Mother, I Am Suffocating. This Is My Last Film About You’ & ‘Father’
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Exclusive: New York-based distributor Dekanalog has added two foreign-language titels to its slate.

In November, the company will release Mother, I Am Suffocating. This Is My Last Film About You, Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese’s Mosotho drama that screened at Berlin, Sheffield, and MoMA Doc Fortnight. The U.S. sales deal was struck with Memento Films. Dekanalog previously released director Mosese’s This Is Not A Burial, It’s A Resurrection earlier this year.

The distributor has also picked up Father, the Berlin Panorama Audience Award Winner from Srdan Golubovic. The pic won the International Narrative Award at Calgary and also screened at Thessaloniki, Transylvania, and Seattle. Set in a a small town in Serbia, the movie stars Goran Bogdan and Boris Isakovic. The U.S. deal was struck with The Match Factory.

Dekanalog has now been operating for a year, its recent theatrical release was Mariam Ghani’s Afghan documentary What We Left Unfinished.
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 9/2/2021
  • by Tom Grater
  • Deadline Film + TV
Venice Topper Barbera Puts Emphasis on Emerging Talent With Biennale College
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Last year, the small Southern African nation of Lesotho entered the Academy Awards race for the first time with Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese’s “This Is Not a Burial, It’s a Resurrection,” one of 28 features spawned over the past decade by Biennale College — Cinema, the workshop created by Alberto Barbera for emerging filmmakers to develop and produce micro-budget feature-length films.

The College was conceived by Barbera in tandem with Torino Film Lab topper Savina Neirotti, who also heads the unique

Venice initiative.

Instead of backing just one aspect of the filmmaking process, this lab shepherds movies through their entire production cycle, working closely with director-producer teams on their projects from initial stages, offering experts and on-site workshop sessions in a former monastery on the island of San Servolo in the Venetian lagoon.

Other standout Biennale College titles include U.S. director Tim Sutton’s experimental “Memphis,” released theatrically stateside by Kino Lorber; and “Mary Is Happy,...
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 8/30/2021
  • by Nick Vivarelli
  • Variety Film + TV
Netherlands, South Africa set up co-development support fund (exclusive)
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Thuthuka is launching today in Cannes.

Netherlands-South Africa co-development fund Thuthuka is launching today in Cannes, to enhance collaboration between the two countries.

The new fund will provide selective script and co-development support for film and documentary projects with South African- and Dutch-related content.

“Thuthuka stands for growth and development,” explained Bero Beyer, CEO of the Netherlands Film Fund. “We are trying to foster creative collaborations between the South African and Netherlands film teams to develop their ideas.”

A 2016 co-production treaty between the countries is already perceived to be working well, with at least one project produced per year since...
See full article at ScreenDaily
  • 7/10/2021
  • by Geoffrey Macnab
  • ScreenDaily
Rushes: Marcell Jankovics, Kodak and Experimental Film Preservation, M. Night Shyamalan's "Old"
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Get in touch to send in cinephile news and discoveries. For daily updates follow us @NotebookMUBI.NEWSAbove: Son of the White Mare (1981)Pioneering Hungarian filmmaker Marcell Jankovics has died. Known for his fantastical and folkloric animations, Jankovics' films like Johnny Corncob (1973) and Son of the White Mare (1981) helped place Hungarian animation on the map. Last year, Jankovics discussed his recently re-released Son of the White Mare with Christopher L. Inoa. Amazon has bought MGM for $8.45 billion. Mike Hopkins, senior VP of Prime Video and Amazon Studios, has announced plans to reimagine MGM's "treasure trove of [intellectual property]," which includes 12 Angry Men, Basic Instinct, and Raging Bull. Cristian Mungiu will be the Jury President for this year's International Critics' Week at Cannes. The festival's lineup is set to be announced on June 7. Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese has started production on his next film, supported by the International Film Festival Rotterdam's Hubert Bals Fund.
See full article at MUBI
  • 6/2/2021
  • MUBI
Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese’s next film among Hubert Bals projects
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Title revealed of the upcoming feature from the director of ‘This Is Not a Burial, It’s a Resurrection’.

The next feature from Lesotho filmmaker Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese is among 10 upcoming projects to receive support from the Hubert Bals Fund (Hbf), administered by the International Film Festival Rotterdam.

The writer and director of Sundance award-winner This Is Not a Burial, It’s a Resurrection has received a grant of €10,000 for script and project development on his fourth feature, titled The Chattering Of Teeth.

Earlier this year, the filmmaker said he was developing a new feature around the theme of siege and fear...
See full article at ScreenDaily
  • 5/27/2021
  • by Michael Rosser
  • ScreenDaily
Memento posts fresh deals for ‘Night Of The Kings’, ‘This Is Not A Burial’ (exclusive)
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Night Of The Kings made it onto the 15-picture shortlist of the Best International Film category at the Oscars this year.

Memento Films International (Mfi) has unveiled a fresh round of deals for Ivorian-French filmmaker Philippe Lacôte’s Oscar-shortlisted prison drama Night Of The Kings.

The feature has sold to Australia and New Zealand (Rialto), China (Huanxi), Indonesia (Pt Falcon), Mexico (Alameda), Brazil (Telecine).

In Europe, it has been acquired by Switzerland (Xenix), Benelux (Imagine), France (Jhr), Spain (Flamingo) Poland (New Horizons), Romania (Transilvania), Portugal (Alambique) and ex-Yugoslavia (Kino Mediteran).

These acquisitions follow its previously announced sale to Neon for...
See full article at ScreenDaily
  • 5/19/2021
  • by Melanie Goodfellow
  • ScreenDaily
Rushes: 100 Greatest Korean Films, Arclight Closures, Prismatic Ground, New Jarmusch Short
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Get in touch to send in cinephile news and discoveries. For daily updates follow us @NotebookMUBI.NEWSAbove: The Cinerama Dome in Quentin Tarantino's Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (2019). Decurion has announced that it won't be reopening its Arclight Cinemas and Pacific Theatres locations. The theater chain's most famous location is its Hollywood Arclight multiplex on Sunset Boulevard, home to the Cinerama Dome. Arte France Cinéma will be co-producing three new features: Valeria Bruni Tedeschi's Les amandiers (starring Louis Garrel), Arnaud Desplechin's Brother and Sister (which stars Marion Cotillard and Melvil Poupaud), and Pietro Marcello's L'envol (the filmmaker's first feature in France). The Workers of the Cinemateca Brasileira have released a manifesto calling attention to the many risks facing the Cinemateca's unattended collection, equipment, and facilities due to its "current state of abandonment" by the Ministry of Tourism. Backed by TCM, documentarian Josh Grossberg and his...
See full article at MUBI
  • 4/14/2021
  • MUBI
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Rushes: Raoul Peck, New Cinema Scope, Sounds of the Taiwanese New Wave
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Get in touch to send in cinephile news and discoveries. For daily updates follow us @NotebookMUBI.NEWSFilmmaker Bertrand Mandico has illustrated the 70th anniversary cover of Cahier du Cinéma, entitled "Gloria, angel of the history of the cinema." The Museum of Modern Art and Film at Lincoln Center have announced the lineup for the 50th edition of New Directors/New Films. Screenings will take place from April 28-May 8 through the MoMA and Flc virtual cinemas, and in-person screenings at Flc through May 13. The lineup of 27 features and 11 shorts includes Theo Anthony's All Light, Everywhere, Andreas Fontana's Azor, Alice Diop's We (Nous), and Jane Schoenbrun's We’re All Going to the World’s Fair. Recommended VIEWINGAnother Gaze's free streaming project, Another Screen, has announced two new programmes: Hands Tied, about hands, and Eating the Other, about gendered notions of eating. The first official trailer for Mamoru Hosoda's Belle, which...
See full article at MUBI
  • 4/6/2021
  • MUBI
Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese at an event for L'indomptable feu du printemps (2019)
HKIFF45 Announces Firebird Awards Jury Members
Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese at an event for L'indomptable feu du printemps (2019)
The 45th Hong Kong International Film Festival (HKIFF45) today announces a glittering line-up of jury members for its four Firebird Awards competition sections, including three past winners.

Renowned for identifying and recognising new talents in young cinema, documentary, and short film, four independent jury panels will select 12 winners from 43 films for this year’s Firebird Awards competition. HKIFF45 will announce the results online on 11 April, the penultimate day of the festival.

The Young Cinema Competition for Chinese language films has heightened the profiles of some of Asia’s emerging talents since its introduction two years ago. Adjudicating this year’s selection are Yu Lik-wai, director, award-winning cinematographer, and a long term collaborator of Jia Zhangke; acclaimed Hong Kong art director, costume designer and film editor William Chang; and La Frances Hui, film curator with New York’s Museum of Modern Art.

Three distinguished industry professionals from three continents will make...
See full article at AsianMoviePulse
  • 3/26/2021
  • by Rouven Linnarz
  • AsianMoviePulse
Horror Highlights: Dachra, Lycan, Panic Fest, Morgue, Swamp Dogs, The Believer
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Dekanalog Acquires Dachra: "Fresh off their national theatrical launch of Quentin Dupieux's acclaimed absurdist comedy Keep An Eye Out (Au Poste!), Gotham-based distributor Dekanalog has added three acclaimed festival favorites to their bustling 2021 slate, including the acclaimed horror thriller Dachra from writer/director Abdelhamid Bouchnak, per an announcement this morning at Deadline.

The acquisitions, which also include Paul Negoescu's Two Lottery Tickets and Mariam Ghani's What We Left Unfinished, join a stacked 2021 lineup for Dekanalog that currently includes theatrical and digital releases of Grímur Hákonarson's TIFF darling The County, Ena Sendijarević's Rotterdam Tiger Award-winning Take Me Somewhere Nice, and Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese's Sundance-winning This Is Not A Burial, It's A Resurrection - Lesotho's first-ever submission to The Academy Awards.

Dachra, which is based on a terrifying true story and made waves at the world's largest genre film festivals, follows a group of students who become...
See full article at DailyDead
  • 3/23/2021
  • by Jonathan James
  • DailyDead
Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese at an event for L'indomptable feu du printemps (2019)
Out of Africa: how Netflix’s ambitions could change the continent’s cinema
Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese at an event for L'indomptable feu du printemps (2019)
The streaming giant has come knocking, but a lack of infrastructure and government support continues to hinder the continent telling its own stories

It was the sight of donkeys carrying camera equipment that reminded Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese he was shooting in Lesotho. The director was filming This Is Not a Burial, It Is a Resurrection in a remote part of his tiny home nation, which has no cinemas and – unsurprisingly – zero film infrastructure. “It’s a bit daring to take a crew there and shoot because there’s no electricity,” Mosese says from his home in Berlin. “Especially when we go to the mountains – we had to rely on the donkeys because at some point we just couldn’t carry the equipment.”

The shoot ran on petrol-powered generators. Villagers pitched in as ad-hoc crew members. Many fingers were crossed. “We had to build everything from scratch,” he says. That approach didn’t harm the film.
See full article at The Guardian - Film News
  • 3/12/2021
  • by Lanre Bakare
  • The Guardian - Film News
International Film Festival Rotterdam announces its award winners - IFFR 2021 – Awards
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This year's expanded edition saw the triumph of Vinothraj Ps's Pebbles, winner of the prestigious Tiger Award; European victors included I Comete – A Corsican Summer and Looking for Venera. Yesterday, International Film Festival Rotterdam announced its award winners for its 50th edition. In detail, this year saw the triumph of Vinothraj Ps's Pebbles, the recipient of the prestigious Tiger Award. The jury, composed of Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese, Orwa Nyrabia, Hala Elkoussy, Helena van der Meulen and Ilse Hughan, provided the following supporting statement: “In the midst of many admirable and ambitious works, the jury was blown away by a seemingly simple and humble film we fell in love with instantly. Creating maximum impact with a minimum of means, the filmmaker reaches his goal with the same conviction and determination as his main characters. The result is a lesson in pure cinema, captivating us with its beauty...
See full article at Cineuropa - The Best of European Cinema
  • 2/8/2021
  • Cineuropa - The Best of European Cinema
Rotterdam film festival 2021 winners revealed
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Winners hailed from India, France, Kosovo, Argentina and Bosnia.

Vinothraj P.S.’s Pebbles has scooped the Tiger Award, worth €40,000, at the 50th International Film Festival Rotterdam (IFFR).

The Tiger jury, including Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese, Orwa Nyrabia, Hala Elkoussy, Helena van der Meulen and Ilse Hughan, said the Indian drama was “a lesson in pure cinema, captivating us with its beauty and humour, in spite of its grim subject”.

Set in a rural village in southern India, Pebbles follows an alcoholic father and his young son as they embark on an eight-mile walk under scorching sun in a bid to reunite with his wife,...
See full article at ScreenDaily
  • 2/7/2021
  • by Michael Rosser
  • ScreenDaily
Filmmaker Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese talks new project, creative process
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The filmmaker has been researching subjects of siege and fear while locked down in home city of Berlin.

Director Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese, whose film This Is Not A Burial, It’s A Resurrection is Lesotho’s Oscar submission this year, is developing a new feature around the theme of siege and fear after being grounded in his adopted home city of Berlin by the Covid-19 pandemic.

Mosese teased the new project in the Big Talk programme of this week’s online International Film Festival Rotterdam. The filmmaker is also participating as a member of the jury.

“It’s been a...
See full article at ScreenDaily
  • 2/4/2021
  • by Melanie Goodfellow
  • ScreenDaily
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Mubi Poster of the Month: José Luis Merino x "This Is Not a Burial, It's a Resurrection"
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Each month, we're commissioning a different artist to create a movie poster for a film exclusively playing on the platform. This January, José Luis Merino has made a poster for Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese's This is Not a Burial, It’s a Resurrection, which is receiving an exclusive global streaming premiere on Mubi starting January 13, 2021 in the UK and other countries.
See full article at MUBI
  • 1/29/2021
  • MUBI
Rotterdam heads reveal how juries will watch films and June event plans
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Ifrr director Vanja Kaludjercic and IFFR Pro head Marit van den Elshout shared fresh details about the upcoming event.

The heads of International Film Festival Rotterdam (IFFR) have revealed how its juries will watch films in cinemas despite the pandemic and shared fresh details of its physical festival in June.

Speaking during the latest ScreenDaily Talks, IFFR festival director Vanja Kaludjercic outlined plans for how the five jurors in its flagship Tiger Competition would screen the 16 selected titles during the festival, which runs online-only from February 1-7.

“I’m a bit jealous because the juries are the only ones who...
See full article at ScreenDaily
  • 1/29/2021
  • by Michael Rosser
  • ScreenDaily
Dekanalog To Launch International-Focused Film Distribution Outfit With Four-Film Slate
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Exclusive: Dekanalog, a new theatrical and digital distribution company with an emphasis on presenting international titles for U.S. audiences, will launch in March with four films on its initial slate.

The company will release Keep an Eye Out, an absurdist comedy directed by Quentin Dupieux, online on March 5. The film played the festival circuit and received a commercial release in France, where Dupieux has garnered a following after receiving critical praise for previous films like Wrong and Rubber.

Festival prize winner This is Not a Burial, It’s a Resurrection will have its virtual debut April 2 via Brooklyn Academy of Music and Museum of the Moving Image. Directed by Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese, the drama is this year’s official Oscar submission from Lesotho, the first ever from the African nation.

Also on the Dekanalog slate, without release dates as of now, are Take Me Somewhere Nice and The County.
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 1/13/2021
  • by Dade Hayes
  • Deadline Film + TV
Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese: Contours in the Dust
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Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese's This is Not a Burial, It’s a Resurrection is exclusively showing on Mubi starting January 13, 2021 in the UK and other countries.Writer, director and cinematographer Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese was born and raised in Hlotse, a market town in Lesotho near the South African border. Today Mosese lives in Berlin, where he’s lived for the last eight years. Since moving, he’s felt displaced in both his birth country and his new home. “I am a part of Berlin but I know I don’t belong there, I belong to Lesotho and yet I am not a part of it,” he explained to Christopher Vourlias in an interview for Variety. In Berlin, he formed “Barefooted Cinema,” a film movement characterized by its fast development process and the “Mokoari Collective,” a group of filmmakers who abide by the movement. Barefooted Cinema’s production timeline is truncated...
See full article at MUBI
  • 1/12/2021
  • MUBI
Mary Twala
This Is Not a Burial, It’s a Resurrection review – an uncompromising tale of resistance
Mary Twala
Mary Twala gives an intimate yet epic performance as an 80-year-old widow fighting plans for a dam that will obliterate her village in Lesotho

This is an extraordinary and otherworldly feature film from the tiny landlocked kingdom of Lesotho in southern Africa. It is the tale of a rebel spirit: an elderly woman who opposes government plans to flood her village, making way for a dam. It’s a film about resistance and resilience, but director Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese is coolly unsentimental and realistic about the inevitable march of capitalism and construction. Weaving in ideas around displacement, collective identity and history, this film takes on almost mythic qualities.

Related: From Beyoncé to the Oscars: Mary Twala, Africa's queen of cinema...
See full article at The Guardian - Film News
  • 1/6/2021
  • by Cath Clarke
  • The Guardian - Film News
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