:Cinema of Tanzania

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{{Multiple issues|{{more citations needed|date=January 2018}}

{{one source|date=January 2018}}}}File:A film crew in Tanzania.jpgFile:A filmmaker working in Tanzania.jpgTanzania's film industry, also known as Swahiliwood or Bongo movie (a portmanteau of Swahili, Tanzania's official language, and Hollywood) and Bongowood,{{Cite web|url=https://theconversation.com/from-nollywood-to-new-nollywood-the-story-of-nigerias-runaway-success-47959|title = From Nollywood to New Nollywood: The story of Nigeria's runaway success}} was established around 2001.{{cite web|url=http://mfditanzania.com/swahiliwood-researching-tanzanias-film-industry/|title=Swahiliwood: Researching Tanzania's Film Industry - Media for Development International|website=mfditanzania.com}}

Films produced with low budgets, short schedules and camcorders are referred to colloquially as "bongo films" and are mass-released in DVD format. In 2011, bongo films were produced on a regular basis, but only a few higher quality Tanzanian feature films have been released in cinemas.Voice of America report on Tanzanian film industry

The Zanzibar International Film Festival hosts films, workshops, exhibitions, Dhow races, music and performing arts, as well as panoramas of women, children and villages.{{Cite web|url=http://www.ziff.or.tz|title=ZIFF 2018 {{!}} Zanzibar International Film Festival|website=www.ziff.or.tz|access-date=2018-04-16}} The company movies are Steps Intertainment and Mzimuni Theatre Art.

History

Tanzanians inherited parts of their cinematic culture from British colonialists, including the production of both commercial films and government-funded instructional films.{{Cite journal|last=Mwakalinga|first=Mona|date=2013|title=The Political Economy of Cinema (video film) in Tanzania|url=http://repository.udsm.ac.tz:8080/xmlui/bitstream/handle/123456789/141/The%20Political%20Economy%20of%20Cinema%20in%20Tanzania.pdf?sequence=1|journal=African Review|volume=40|pages=203–217}} After independence, the newly formed government led by the President Julius Kambarage Nyerere sent home South African film expats, and established the country's own film industry under the Ministry of Community Development.{{fact|date=January 2023}}

South Africa was plagued by apartheid, and Tanzania and other independent African countries broke ties with them until it ended. Replacing the South African filmmakers were Yugoslavian filmmakers, who started aiding the film industry of Tanzania in 1963, helping establish the industry. Many of the films created during this time were instructional or educational, made by the government, and distributed across Tanzania.

Before Tanzania's independence in 1961, some foreign movies were filmed in Tanganyika and Zanzibar. Most Tanzanian film production studios today are based in Dar es Salaam.{{cite web |date=25 April 2017 |title=Biggest Cities In Tanzania |url=https://www.worldatlas.com/articles/biggest-cities-in-tanzania.html}}

Tanzanian films

In 2001, Maangamizi: The Ancient One was the first and up to now the last submission of Film from Tanzania for the Academy Awards category Best Foreign Film. Mapenzi Ya Mungu (The Will of God) was released in 2014 Tanzanian movies list. Bongoland, a film about a US immigrant from Tanzania, was released in 2003. Other notable films include Ni Noma, released in June 2016. While navigating the requirements for film permits in Tanzania, filmmakers have worked to bring unique local stories to the screen despite logistical challenges. Other movies were from Mzimuni Theatre Arts which are Misukosuko release in (2010), Double J (Double Jimmy) in (2013), Part of Job (2011) and Inspector Seba (2008).

Well known artists include Steven Kanumba, Blandina Chagula, Elizabeth Michael, Kajala Masanja, Jacqueline Wolper, Mzee Chillo, Nelly Kamwelu, Irene Uwoya, Baby Madaha, Wema Sepetu, Ernest Napoleon, Vincent Kigosi, Lucy Komba, Jimmy Mponda (J Plus), Sebastian Mwanangulo (Seba) and Charles Magari.

Foreign films

Many foreign films were shot in and around Tanzania prior to independence, including adventure, romance and war movies.

Eight months of footage were required for the U.S. film Men of Two Worlds at Tanganyika in 1943. John Wayne's movie Hatari! was shot in Tanzania. Nature documentaries have been filmed in Tanzania, including a few parts of Impressionen unter Wasser and The Crimson Wing: Mystery of the Flamingos. In 1992, Dutch documentary Isingiro Hospital was made about a hospital in Tanzania treating AIDS patients. In 2010, filmmaker Nick Broomfield produced the documentary Albino United, about an albino football team in Tanzania in 2010, and filmed an adaption of the Ronan Bennett's novel The Catastrophist in the city of Mwanza.{{Cite news|url=http://www.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/africa/06/21/zanzibar.cinema.broomfield/index.html|title=Nick Broomfield: Tanzania is the next movie hotspot|publisher=CNN|first=Laura |last=Allsop |access-date=2018-04-16|language=en}}

References