ESSAY FILM FESTIVAL 2023 ANNOUNCEMENT

The Essay Film Festival returns in March with a wide-ranging selection of formally ambitious and politically engaged films of past and present.

The festival takes place 25-31 March, with screenings and events at the ICA and Birkbeck Cinema, and two additional festival events at the BFI on 13 March and 10 April.

Lebanese artist Rania Stephan’s intimate conversational portrait of Syrian writer and activist Samar Yazbek explores the limits of language in the face of atrocity and displacement, while her Beirut street-scenes and her mixing of private and public archives ask important questions about memory and witnessing.

The inherent violence of colonialism and its cultural legacies are examined by Med Hondo’s essay on the lives of immigrant workers in France and by Assia Djebar’s poetic reworking of archive images shot in the Maghreb.

Innovative and creative approaches to anthropological investigation are proposed by Ruchir Joshi’s study of Bengal’s traditional wandering musicians and by Jocelyne Saab’s lovingly crafted portrayals of Egypt in a time of transition.

A new essay film by Lis Rhodes combines aesthetic complexity and social analysis, while a collaboration between researcher Ian Christie and filmmaker Chiemi Shimada casts a fresh eye on Soviet filmmaker Sergei Eisenstein’s time spent in Mexico in 1931.

Finally, two daytime events at Birkbeck Cinema are devoted respectively to short films made by Brazilian documentarist Aloysio Raulino and to the rich archive of essay films produced by the Arts Council.

Experimental and political, the essay film calls into question the language of representation and operates at the forefront of cinema’s critical engagement with the world.

The Essay Film Festival is proposed by Birkbeck Institute for the Moving Image and the ICA, with the support of CHASE Doctoral Training Partnership and in collaboration with Open City Documentary Festival.

Come and join us! 

On behalf of the Essay Film Festival: Matthew Barrington, Michael Temple, and Emma Yapp; Kieron Corless, Ricardo Matos Cabo, Janet McCabe, Raquel Morais, and Laura Mulvey.

 

 

 

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