
This year sees the 30th Durban International Film Festival (DIFF), celebrating and bringing together films
and filmmakers from all corners of the globe to showcase the diversity and magic
of cinema.
In just 11 days, DIFF will present over 200 screenings at
venues across the city of Durban and in surrounding communities.
While the
selection of fascinating, passionate and entertaining films forms the centre of
the festival, an extensive programme of free workshops and seminars – this year
based at the Royal Hotel - will prime a new generation of South African
filmmakers.
Fittingly, the 30 th edition of the festival will open with the Durban
film, My Secret Sky (Izulu Lami) directed by Madoda Ncayiyana, and featuring a
wonderful cast of child actors who have never performed for the screen before.
The festival will close with Woody Allen's hilarious Whatever Works , which
stars Larry David ( Seinfeld , Curb Your Enthusiasm ) and Evan Rachel Wood.
In between these two great bookends, audiences will encounter some of the
year's most eagerly-anticipated films, award-winners from major festivals and
world premieres from South Africa and beyond.
World premieres of South African feature films include Shirley Adams by the
extremely talented young director Oliver Hermanus, Long Street , the new film
from Revel Fox which features the Durban icon, Busi Mhlongo, and For Better For
Worse , Naresh Veeran and Raeesa Mahomed's charming Durban-set romantic comedy.
Also making its premiere at the festival is White Lion , the beautifully shot
tale of a young man's protection of a rare white lion. Other South African films
include Anthony Fabian's Skin based on the true story of a physically black girl
born to white parents in apartheid South Africa, Steve Jacobs' Disgrace based on
JM Coetzee's award-winning novel, Savo Tufedgzic's psychological thriller Crime
- It's A Way Of Life , and JJ Van Rensburg's coming-of-age drama Intonga .
In one of the most talked about films of the year, soccer icon Eric Cantona
gives a charming performance in Ken Loach's hilarious and touching Looking For
Eric which makes it's African premiere at the festival. An Education , directed
by Lone Scherfig from a screenplay by the popular British novelist, Nick Hornby,
is a joyous and funny drama. Fresh from its Camera d'Or win in Cannes ,
Australian Warwick Thornton's Samson & Delilah also makes its African debut
at the festival. Iconic actors Brenda Blethyn and Sotigui Kouyate co-star in
Rachid Bouchareb's deeply moving London River which is set in the aftermath of
the terrorist bombings in London. Audrey Tautou ( Amelie ) gives a star turn in
Anne Fontaine's sumptuous Coco Before Chanel which looks at the life of the
fashion legend.
The festival includes films by some of the world's most prominent directors
such as Steven Soderbergh ( Che ), Takeshi Kitano ( Achilles and the Tortoise ),
Nuri Bilge Ceylan ( Three Monkeys ), Kore-eda Hirokazu ( Still Walking ),
Rituparno Ghosh ( After Words , a DIFF world premiere), Tunde Kelani ( Arugba ),
Laurent Cantet (the Palme d'Or winner, The Class ), Kim Jee-woon ( The Good, The
Bad, The Weird ), Deepa Mehta ( Heaven On Earth ), Paolo Sorrentino ( Il Divo ),
Priyadarshan ( Kanchivaram ), the Dardenne brothers ( Lorna's Silence ), Mamoru
Oshii ( The Sky Crawlers ) and Philippe Lioret ( Welcome ).