New York African Film Festival

New York African Film Festival
Saturday, May 10, 2025 at 11:30am
Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center
144 West 65th Street

Film at Lincoln Center (FLC) and African Film Festival, Inc. (AFF) will partner to present the 32nd edition of the New York African Film Festival (NYAFF). NYAFF features more than 30 contemporary and classic films from Africa and its diaspora screening at FLC May 7 through May 13, with 100 films in total as the festival continues at other esteemed New York City cultural venues throughout the month of May, with many filmmakers in attendance for post-screening QandAs. Since its inception in 1993, the festival has been at the forefront of showcasing African and diaspora filmmakers' unique storytelling through the moving image.

This year's theme, "Fluid Horizons: A Shifting Lens on a Hopeful World," honors the resilience of African youth and the forebearers who paved the way for them. As cinema was an integral part of the African continent's struggle for independence and the triumph of its liberation, this edition of the festival celebrates the African youth who have turned to their cameras to document their experiences and the influence of those who came before them. With a multitude of genres ranging from comedies to experimental films, the 32nd New York African Film Festival offers a multidimensional take on African culture, history, and cinema.

Schedule of Events:

11:30 am: From Then to Now: Celebrating 15 Years of African Cinema - Presented by AFF and OkayAfrica

The African Film Festival (AFF) and OkayAfrica present From Then to Now: Celebrating 15 Years of African Cinema-a thoughtful exploration of the evolving landscape of African film. Bringing together four acclaimed filmmakers featured in this year's festival, this panel offers a rare opportunity to reflect on the creative shifts and enduring themes shaping African cinema today. Panelists include Abderrahmane Sissako (Black Tea), Balufu Bakupa-Kanyinda (Juju Factory), Afolabi Olalekan (Opening Night film Freedom Way), and Fatou Cisse (Furu), who also honors the profound legacy of her father, the late Souleymane Cisse. Together, they trace the threads of continuity and change across a decade and a half of cinematic storytelling, offering insight into the present moment and the future of the art form.

1:30 pm: Mweze

David-Pierre Fila's documentary on Mweze Ngangura-the visionary Congolese director of Kin Kiesse; Life Is Beautiful; Changa Changa; The King, the Cow and the Banana Tree; Pieces d'identites; and The Governor's New Clothes-unfolds as a meditation on history, politics, cinema, image, and time. Shot in Kinshasa, Ouagadougou, and Brussels, it is not a biography but an introspective exploration of Mweze's life today in Belgium, where he has settled with his family. What emerges is a self-portrait conceived by Mweze himself, a collage of images layered with sound impressions. From the very first frames, the film presents itself with an understated elegance and subtle charms, its subject less concerned with intellectual discourse and more with stirring the heart.

3:45 pm: Identity Pieces

In Mweze Ngangura's modern comic fairy tale, Mani Kongo, King of the Bakongo, embarks on a trip to Belgium to find his beloved daughter, Mwana, whom he has lost touch with. Dignified and outfitted in full regalia, the African king walks into a society that neither respects his title nor values his humanity. On arriving in Belgium, he has to cope with the very best and the very worst of the Black diaspora, as well as with prejudices rampant in European society, and finds good friends amongst the poor, lower-class whites-showing that nothing is ever black or white.

6:30 pm: Memories of Love Returned

On April 24, 2002, filmmaker Ntare Guma Mbaho Mwine's car broke down in the small town of Mbirizi, Uganda. While waiting for it to be repaired he stumbled upon a small photo studio and met photographer Kibaate Aloysius Ssalongo, whose work spanned from the late 1950s to his death in 2006. This chance encounter turned into a 22-year journey documenting and exploring Kibaate's life and photography and the profound impact it had on Ntare's life and the lives of the entire community he documented. Executive produced by Steven Soderbergh, this intimate, nuanced documentary about the transformative power of photography was named best documentary at the Africa International Film Festival and won the Audience Award at the Pan African Film Festival.

8:45 pm: Shorts Program 2: Mzansi Moments

This collection of short films from South Africa includes Ntokozo Mlaba's The Passage, Michelle Name and Onke Meje's Intsikelelo Yamanzi, Nduduzo Shandu's Gogo, Phumi Morare's Why the Cattle Wait, Hachimiya Ahamada's Zanatany, When Soulless Shrouds Whisper, Kgomotso Sekhu's Shap Shap, and Zoe Ramushu's Damsel, Not in Distress.

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