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Top Ten Films
1. Till
Death Do Us Part
(video clip, realvideo format 2,235kbytes, 10 minutes @56kbps)
Till Death do us Part is a thirty-minute
documentary that tells the heart-wrenching story of three
widows in eastern Nigeria who suffered harmful traditional
widowhood practices. Nneka, a subsistence farmer, Uche, a
sports coach, and Celestina, a housewife, give a personal
account of the typical trials and demeaning rites that widows
are forced to undergo. The women reveal their deep emotional,
psychological, physical, and economic scars as well as the
social stigma associated with widowhood. Traditional rulers,
the clergy, women leaders, lawyers, social workers and other
community groups comment on widowhood rites, their history
and social implication, as well as the need for change. The
film points to two progressive grassroots organisations that
are assisting widows with emotional and legal counsel, training
and small-scale loans to help them break the cycle of bondage.
2. Ready
or Not: The Future is Ours (video
clip, realvideo 1,945kbytes, 8 minutes @56kbps)
This four-minute film combines moving photographic
stills with poetry and a haunting soundtrack to present the
voice of an unheard generation of Nigerians – the youth.
3. People Speak About Democracy
& Good Governance (4 video clips, realvideo)
As Nigeria ushers in a new political dispensation
after decades of military rule, this collection of short films
explores the feelings, hopes and dreams of a cross section
of the citizenry. Women, the disabled(long
clip - 3mins, 000kbytes, 0 mins @56kbps)(short
clip - 45secs, 000kbytes, 0 mins @56kbps)
and children(long
clip - 3mins, 000kbytes, 0 mins @56kbps)(short
clip - 45secs, 000kbytes, 0 mins @56kbps)
speak out in this poignant and extremely inspiring piece.
4. Scenarios from the Sahel
Seven films that highlight scenarios dealing
with HIV and AIDS prevention. Tapping into the African sense
of humour these stories that are African written, African
produced and African directed, are true to life, playful and
touching glances at the way that we all, young and old, inexperienced
or not, negotiate sexual situations.
5. Rhetoric to Reality
This series looks at the progress in achieving
greater equality for women- five years after the Beijing conference
on women. Women broadcasters from developing countries produced
this series on gender equality and human rights. Against
the Odds(video
clip, realvideo 2,823bytes, 12 mins @56kbps)
from Nigeria, profiles the contributions of two women activists:
Chief Bisi Ogunleye the President of the Country Women's Association
of Nigeria and the Honourable Temi Harriman, Representative
of the Warri City in the Niger Delta. In No Safe Place
from South Africa, the police and the judiciary still don't
regard rape and domestic violence as serious crimes - with
only one in 20 rapists receiving a conviction and the punishment
for wife killing equal to that for fraud. The stories from
other parts of the world all deal compellingly with issues
reflecting the diverse experience of womanhood across the
world.
6. Teme T Teme
Teme T Teme is a moving parable about progress
and the values of family life in Ethiopia. Teme T Teme tells
the story of a young 12-year-old boy, Belete. Unable to rely
on the rains, his father struggles to grow food for his family.
He needs his son, Belete on the farm and wants him to stop
school. Belete, however, desires to continue his educations
and runs away to the city. But life in the city proves to
be just as harsh. It is not long before Belete is made to
confront the wisdom of the old Ethiopian proverb “Teme T Teme”
which says “with his own hands, he has wrapped a snake around
his neck”.
7. Earth Reports
This includes a total of 52 short reports
on the state of the planet. ‘Earth Report’ breaks the mould
of doom and gloom coverage of the environment. The world is
facing an environmental crisis, but around the globe we have
found that people are rising to their environmental challenges.
“The series aims to be the viewers’ report card on how well
the world is achieving the targets set by the Rio Earth Summit,”
adds Sir David Attenborough.
8. Beijing Spots
This series of 28 minute ‘spots’ present a
snap-shot of gender, power and ownership around the world
at the time of the 1995 Beijing Fourth World Conference on
Women. Ranging in style from humorous to ironic to shocking,
the series tackles issues like pay, heath, sexual stereotypes
and violence.
9. Quiet Revolution
Her mother didn’t want her to do it. Her son
didn’t think it worth the pain. But Mary Floyd went ahead
anyway and took out a loan to start a smallholding. Mother
of two, deserted by her drug-addict husband, Mary looked set
to become dependent on handouts in her home state of Arkansas
– the poorest and most extensive region of rural poverty in
the USA. Now her life is transformed. She sells the vegetables
she grows direct to supermarkets, she’s buying her own house
and she’s well on the road to self-sufficiency. Mary is just
one of six dramatic, personal stories in this inspiring series
about individuals (from Bangladesh, Honduras, India, Nepal
and Zimbabwe) who are overcoming poverty, inequality and environmental
devastation to turn their communities into places of hope
and promise.
10. Health in the City
This innovative portrait of cities is set
to the haunting melodies of the Eurhythmics. Subtitles reveal
staggering statistics relating to health and urban settlements:
by the year 2000, half of the world’s population live in urban
settlements…75 per cent of the cities with over five million
people are in the developing world. The urban population is
growing seven per cent each year…There are 100 million homeless
people across the world. Stunning, and frequently shocking
images accompany these captions revealing the potentially
explosive nature of today’s cities.
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