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WHO WILL START ANOTHER FIRE — Anthology of Short Films by Emerging Filmmakers

WHO WILL START ANOTHER FIRE — Anthology of Short Films by Emerging Filmmakers | Kino Lorber and Dedza Films are proud to announce the DVD and digital release of WHO WILL START ANOTHER FIRE, an international short film omnibus showcasing the works of emerging filmmakers from underrepresented communities around the world.

The collection includes nine films, directed by Peier Tracy Shen, Nicole Amani Magabo Kiggundu, Olive Nwosu, Samira Saraya, Faye Ruiz, Lesley Steele, Emily Packer, Alex Westfall, Nicole Otero and Jermaine Manigault.

Available on DVD and Digitally on Kino NowAugust 10, 2021

WHO WILL START ANOTHER FIRE has also been released theatrically by Kino Lorber, beginning its virtual cinema run on June 11, 2021, working with Dedza Films in its aim to present these stories in a way that has been traditionally reserved for feature films, and to showcase the early works of emerging filmmakers from underrepresented communities.

Each of these stories is personal and distinctly told, but unified by themes of rebirth and growth. These films reject the idea of art for art’s sake and do not exist in self-designed aesthetic vacuums. Their creation represents a necessary reckoning for their makers and so perhaps, too, their viewers. These are growing films by growing filmmakers, made for the future and the past, presented for you to experience for the first time now and again and again afterwards.

The title WHO WILL START ANOTHER FIRE alludes to Malawian poet Jack Mapanje’s Before Chilembwe Tree (1981), in which he asks, “Who will start another fire?” By omitting the question mark and retaining his language, we propose an answer to his question.

DEDZA Scrapbook, an online initiative from aspiring film critics of color who will write about each film, will also be released on August 10, available on DedzaFilms.co. The goal of this supplement is to further build a community of emerging talent whose work and discourse can uplift each other. 

WHO WILL START ANOTHER FIRE — Anthology of Short Films by Emerging Filmmakers

The trailer for the collection was created by 17-year-old editor Clementine Narcisse and the anthology’s DVD poster was designed by Dedza head of design Xan Black. Watch below!

Official selections for WHO WILL START ANOTHER FIRE:

Not Black Enough — Directed by Jermaine Manigault | USA | 19m | English Official Selection: Flatpack, L.A. Shorts International, Aesthetica Short, Hollyshorts, Tallinn Black Nights, Emerging Lens Cultural. Directed by Jermaine Manigault.  A young African-American man struggling to find his identity within his community meets a persuasive relic of the past. Featuring Corey Knight (We Are Who We Are) and Patrick Decile (Moonlight). 

Not Black Enough

Like Flying — Directed by Peier Tracy Shen | USA | 15m | Mandarin & English Official 2021 Selection: Nashville, Palm Springs International Shortfest, Cinequest. A young Chinese-American girl navigates her childhood through her parents’ broken relationship.

Like Flying

Family Tree — Directed by Nicole Amani Magabo Kiggundu | Uganda | 17m | Luganda & English Official 2021 Selection: Pan-African, Ngalabi International Shorts, Reel Sisters of the Diaspora, Capitol Hill. We meet Nagawa, an 8 year old schoolgirl, whose day is almost like any other. She’s presenting a school project about her family tree to her classmates and teacher. According to Nagawa, her family consists of just herself, her Mum, and her Dad, who she only gets to see once a week. This is her normal. When her mother Margaret picks up Nagawa from school, she doesn’t have the heart to tell her daughter that her beloved father has been in a terrible accident. They arrive at the hospital to pay vigil. Her father, an Honourable in the Ugandan parliament is widely popular, and a few people are assembling outside the private ward— including his mistresses with his and their children. Nagawa doesn’t know any of these people and they don’t know her. What follows for Nagawa is an awkward, confusing and heartbreaking afternoon as her parents’ betrayal sets in.

Family Tree

Troublemaker — Directed by Olive Nwosu | Nigeria | 11m | IgboWinner: Best Student Film Award at Discover Film Festival 2019, Best Director at Queens World Film Festival 2020; Nominee: Best Short Award at Raindance 2020, Africa in Motion Film Festival 2020. Obi is hot, bored, and desperate for something to do. When his best friend, Emeka, gives him a packet of firecrackers, the boys decide to have some fun. However, things escalate in unexpected ways, as Obi learns for the first time that actions have consequences, and that there are still things he cannot understand. 

Troublemaker

Polygraph — Directed by Samira Saraya | Israel | 20m | Arabic & Hebrew Winner: Honorable Mention at Tel Aviv International LGBT Film Festival 2020 Official Selection: Queer Screen, Rose Filmdagen, Wicked Queer: Boston’s LGBT Film Festival, Kashish Mumbai International Queer, MIX Milano. Based on a true story, Yasmine, an openly lesbian Arab nurse living in Tel Aviv, finds out that her lover Or, an intelligence officer in the Israeli army, has been reporting on their relationship. Their liaison is further strained by the 2014 Israel-Gaza conflict and by Yasmine’s sister’s visit, who arrives from the West Bank not knowing that she is going to meet the occupying enemy at her own sister’s house.

Polygraph

The Lights Are On, No One’s Home — Directed by Faye Ruiz | USA | 10m | EnglishOfficial Selection: BFI Flare, Outfest Fusion, Long Distance. Mar, a trans woman who left home years ago, returns to her old neighborhood to find her childhood home. Upon her return, she’s confronted with the changes that gentrification has brought to the place she once knew so well. With all her old paths back home gone, she wanders the streets aimlessly. Memories of her early transition, the places she went, her family, her best friend and a drug addiction she can’t seem to shake resurface in unexpected and painful ways. Forced to contend with the ways in which she has remained static in a place that has seemingly changed overnight, she searches for a way to make peace with these changes or maybe just a familiar place to rest her head.

The Lights Are On, No One’s Home

By Way of Canarsie — Directed by Emily Packer & Lesley Steele | USA | 14m | EnglishOfficial Selection: DOC NYC, BlackStar, Twin Cities Black, Better Cities, Prismatic Ground, Third Horizon. A wandering portrait of an oft-neglected shoreline community, By Way of Canarsie imagines possible futures at odds with a peaceful present. Through brief encounters, observational mise-en-scene, and expressive use of analog film, we begin to understand this predominantly black New York City neighborhood’s shared desires for recognition and respect. As some community members advocate for a commuter ferry at the local pier, others reflect on the current use of natural resources, the indigenous history, and the impending environmental concerns that encompass Canarsie’s relationship with the water as it exists today. The competing futures for Canarsie Pier present complications about how and for whom this public space serves.

By Way of Canarsie

The Rose of Manila — Directed by Alex Westfall | Philippines | 12m | Tagalog & EnglishOfficial Selection: San Diego Asian, National Film Festival for Talented Youth, BFI Future, Ivy, CineYouth – Chicago International, 2021 Athens International Film and Video. An imagining of the formative years of Imelda Marcos, who, as one half of the Marcos regime, would become infamous for embezzling billions from the country to sustain her extravagant lifestyle. Here, the fate of a young girl and an entire nation become entangled as the absent mother of a country is born.

The Rose of Manila

Slip — Directed by Nicole Otero | USA | 11mOfficial Selection: Indie Memphis Film Festival 2019. A woman arrives home at the end of a regular day, but as she begins to turn in for the night, she is overcome with a sense of restlessness. Unable to fit inside her own world, she goes back out into the night. Her journey around a mostly vacant city, obscured by darkness, cascades in space and time, away from one feeling and in search of another. Featuring singer-songwriter Tei Shi.

Slip

ABOUT DEDZA FILMS FOUNDER – KATE GONDWE

Kate is a Malawian-American pursuing her undergraduate degree at Emerson College. She is the founder of the shorts distribution initiative Dedza Films, supported by Kino Lorber. Dedza Films is dedicated to acquiring short films from underrepresented communities and creating space for emerging storytellers. Kate has interned at Kino Lorber, Film Comment, NEON, and recently Mubi. Her start in film began as an emerging programmer apprentice at the Tallgrass Film Festival, a program sponsored by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences and FilmWatch grant recipient. Aside from distribution, Kate works as a producer on independent productions and aims to direct as well.

For more info on Dedza Films click HERE

For more info on Kino Lorber click HERE

WHO WILL START ANOTHER FIRE — Anthology of Short Films by Emerging Filmmakers

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