Short Films That Challenge Perspectives: Highlights from the 27th Encounters Festival
THE 27th Encounters South African International Documentary Festival includes a bold, diverse, and boundary-pushing selection of 31 short films in this year’s programme packed with features, panel discussions, and community screenings in Cape Town and Johannesburg from 19 to 29 June.
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Shorts by their nature succeed on their creative brevity - the filmmakers can distill powerful stories into concise, impactful experiences, providing us with fresh perspectives and a kind of freedom that often sparks bold innovation, says Mandisa Zitha, Director of the 27th Encounters South African International Documentary Festival.
The festival includes a bold, diverse, and boundary-pushing selection of 31 short films.
The Shorts Section comprises 11 themed short film blocks featuring documentaries from 20 countries offering personal narratives, socio-political commentaries, and defiant accounts that hold a mirror to the lived experiences of a distinctive range of voices.
This year’s short documentaries have directors confronting issues that span climate justice, gender identity, ancestral land rights, queer desire, and revolutionary memory. Whether poetic or investigative, introspective or confrontational, these films provide deep insights and speak to the world of “now”.
“Our shorts programme is not only a celebration of form and creativity, but a reflection on our world, and they are fierce and courageous contributions to the documentary form,” Zitha said.
Survival against the climate crisis, elements, capitalism, and political forces are traced in the theme “Currents of Resilience” in the documentaries Guardian of the Well, Undercurrent, Pouring Water on Troubled Oil and Keeper.
Imposed layers dictating and defining beauty are peeled back in “More Than Meets the Eye” with Sprouting, and Am I the Skinniest Person You've Ever Seen?, challenging narratives around the body and cultural perceptions.
The “Death by Discrimination” theme faces, head-on, the deadly consequences of systemic prejudice, with The Flow of Resilience and Onthou vi Fredo? offering poetic elegies of memory and defiance.
Women’s struggles, resilience, and strengths across Africa and the diaspora are the focus of the theme “In Her Name” with the shorts Before 16, Victoria, and Seeds from Kivu.
“Fragments of a Forgotten Land” unearths buried pasts and living landscapes with poetically rendered documentaries The Rock Speaks, The Sending of the Crows, and Flowers / Flores.
Powerful South African reflections on land with ancestral memory and identity feature in the theme “The Land’s Silent Witness” with Umhlaba Wokhokho and Spirits of the Land.
Fear, trauma, and the hope of transformation on opposite ends of the economic spectrum are explored in “Between Fear and Forgetting” with They Dug a Grave in My Heart, Never Come Fetch Me, and Fear Fokol.
Breaking taboos and reclaiming sexuality are spotlighted in the theme “Redefining Desire: From Fear to Freedom” with Slut Club, Unyagoni, and What I Do Not Know Will Not Kill Me.
“Unmasking the Self” is a reflection on identity, towards self-acceptance in the films Message from Anonymous, At the Edge of Skin and Facing Forward.
Voices of survival, and resistance against brutal colonialisation are heard in “Roots of Resistance” with Ahmad Alive, Medallion, The Other Side of Beauty, and Dreams of a Revolution.
“Between the Ordinary and the Uncanny” embraces the seemingly ordinary made extraordinary with The Fries Philosopher and perfectly a strangeness.
Encounters takes place at the Labia Theatre and V&A Waterfront Ster-Kinekor in Cape Town and The Bioscope and The Zone @ Rosebank in Johannesburg from June 19 to 29.
Cape Times