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Date
: 17/03/2006
Source: Ministry for Arts and Culture
Title: Jordan: Dinner hosted by SABC for cast and crew of
Tsotsi
Speech by Minister of Arts and Culture, Dr Pallo Z Jordan,
at dinner hosted by SABC for the cast of Tsotsi, Sandton
Programme Director,
Advocate Dali Mpofu, CEO of the SABC,
Mr Eddie Mbalo, CEO of the NFVF,
Your Worship, the Executive Mayor of Johannesburg,
Councillor Amos Masondo,
Governor of the Reserve Bank, Mr Tito Mboweni,
The CEO of the Industrial Development Corporation,
Distinguished guests,
Ladies and gentlemen,
Let me also acknowledge and thank Ster-Kinekor, Gauteng Province,
the City of Johannesburg and a number of other bodies for their
participation in tonight’s events.
We are tonight to celebrate yet another success of the South
African film industry. The reception that the cast and the team
responsible for making “Tsotsi” have received in every
part of the country that they have visited over the last six to
seven days speaks for itself.
Gavin Hood, Presley Cheneyagae, Terry Pheto and the rest of the
cast have truly done South Africa proud. And they have done us
proud in an extremely competitive industry with a South African
story, shot in South Africa by a South African team of film makers
using South African actors in all the leading roles. I think that
puts to rest the much touted excuse we hear from non-South African
producers and directors, “No, we need an American actor for
the lead, South African actors overact because they are trained for
the small screen; ”South African actors just don’t have
what it takes.”
I think we have all long suspected that these were excuses. The
fact of the matter is that what we have witnessed in the past were
the funders of movies made in South Africa, about South Africa
flexing their financial muscle. As Johnny Matshikiza put it,
“film makers from outside were not allowing South Africans a
crack of our own whip.” Well we are cracking our own whip.
And guess what? The South African actors, directors and
cinematographers are outperforming those who think they understand
South African characters better than we do!
It is not educative that all the South African films for which
foreign actors were cast in preference for South Africans not one
has attained an Oscar nomination! There must be a message in there
somewhere!
The cultural industries of this country have been identified as
potentially powerful levers for stimulating economic growth and
wealth creation. It has taken time for many to realise that behind
every film there is a very long value chain. Everyone is very aware
of the actors who play the leading roles. Many know the name of the
director and the producer. But behind these are the faceless yet
very important screenwriters, costume designers, the lightning and
sound technicians, the musicians who compose and perform the score,
the set designers and builders and others whose names we barely
notice because we are usually an our way out of the theatre when
the credits roll. Yet without them the film would not be
possible.
That value chain in its turn is dependent on a host of modern
industrial processes from the generation of a reliable electricity
supply to the chemical processes that take place in film
laboratories. It when one adds all these elements up that the
significance and the potential of the film industry become
clear.
Very few South Africans realise that at the dawn of the 20th
century this country was the site of the earliest films shot. The
Anglo-Boer War of 1899 - 1902 was the first ever war to be filmed.
So when you watch all those spectacular pyrotechnics on Cable News
Network (CNN), the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) and the
Sky-TV, remember that it all began on battlefields in this
country.
When film and the cinema first came on stream they were regarded by
many as the culmination of humanity’s urge to transmit
information by story telling. Here at last was a means of story
telling that combined theatre, the visual arts with the electronic
reproduction of sound! As a new addition to popular culture the
cinema had an immediate appeal especially because it was so
eminently accessible. It is that accessibility that is, ironically,
under threat during our day because cinema tickets are so expensive
and the distribution of exhibition spaces in our country has become
so skewed. As people involved in film and film making it is
incumbent upon all of us here to give serious thought to how are
going to address these matters.
I submit that as long South Africans themselves do not have access
to our award winning films so long will the possibilities of South
African film and film making be constrained.
All of us here have a very keen interest in developing and
expanding the frontiers of our film industry. We already have one
small studio, Table Mountain Film Studios, operating in Cape Town.
We must now use the momentum that the success of
“Tsotsi” has generated to drive the realisation and the
establishment of the other studios that have been in the pipeline
for the last two years. The South African Broadcasting Corporation
(SABC) has already designated R40 millions to promote local
productions. We already have a number of provincial film
commissions. Given this energy we should use our collective wisdom
and zeal to build even more studios.
This is the third year in succession that the South African films
have scooped up awards at the top film festivals around the world.
In 2004 when we first grabbed the brass ring many dismissed that as
a sympathy vote, a way of acknowledging this country’s first
decade of democracy. Well the hat trick of awards demonstrates that
it is the quality of our film products and the talent of our actors
and directors that is being affirmed.
This time last year I singled out and congratulated the cast, the
directors, the crew and the scriptwriters who gave us Yesterday.
Those involved in the making of the Gold Bear winner, ‘Carmen
in Khayelitsha’ also earned accolades.
‘Forgiveness’ won nine international film festival and
audience choice awards including Best South African Film at the
Cape Town World Cinema Festival, Sithengi. Zola Maseko became the
first South African to win the most prestigious African film award,
the Golden Stallion of Yennenga for the feature film that he
directed, DRUM. Ramadan Suleiman and Pamela Nomvete won the Silver
Award at the Carthage Film Festival in Tunisia won the award for
best actress, the European Union award for films on peace and
reconciliation as well as the United Nations Children’s Fund
(UNICEF) prize for the promotion of women’s rights for their
film Zulu Love Letter. Teddy Mattera claimed the award for best
feature film for Max and Mona, a truly South African comedy that
tested the boundaries of humour often by sailing close to the wind.
With such an outstanding record, even the doubting Thomases will
have to agree that the South African film industry is coming into
its own.
But don’t let our achievements encourage an attitude of
complacency. If the film industry is going to develop and grow, all
South Africans must get behind it to give it the support it needs.
In 2002 the Department of Arts and Culture set aside R35 million
for the production of feature films. That money was passed on to
the National Film and Video Foundation (NFVF) who invested in the
production of 15 feature films. Given the high costs involved in
film making the NFVF was only able to achieve this by exploiting
the co-production agreements government has negotiated with a
number of European countries including France, Italy, Germany and
Britain. Some 45 percent of the funding for “Tsotsi”
came from Britain. I want to use this podium to call on South
African financial institutions to play a more vigorous role in
funding our films. This year we will improve on previous
allocations to the NFVF and extend our cooperation with other
sectors of government and the parastatals to enhance the funding
available for film industry.
Audiences in other parts of the world have expressed their
confidence in South African films by voting with their wallets and
with their feet. I think it is a sad indictment of our own
financial institutions that they appear to have so little
confidence in our film industry.
South Africa will be hosting the first African Film Summit from 3
until 9 April 2006. This summit will hopefully provide for a
dialogue among African film professionals regarding the state of
African cinema in the context of the global economic order. Last
October in Paris the general conference of United Nations
Educational Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) adopted a
convention on the protection of cultural diversity. Given the
immense power wielded by the cultural industries of the developed
countries, Africa’s youthful film industry does not need to
take stock. We are pleased to note that many African governments
recognise the value of this initiative and support it.
The creative economy of this country and those of other parts of
the continent have potential. Their growth and development will
depend in large measure on the interventions we make.
‘Tsotsi’ and other African films that have made a mark
internationally demonstrate that African stories have international
resonance. If this is to be the African century we aspire to, that
aspiration must be under-girded by our willingness to encourage,
affirm and support Africa’s creative artists.
In that respect let me assure all here, you will not find your
government wanting.
But tonight we are here to celebrate. We are celebrating the Oscar
Academy Award and the global acknowledgement of South African
talent that it signifies. We are here to celebrate a South African
story written by a South African playwright, directed by a South
African director and brilliantly performed by young South African
actors. Yes we are blowing our own trumpet! We are even blowing our
Vuvuzelas, as we shamelessly affirm our talent. The talent of our
young creative people of our directors, of our technicians, of our
designers, of our script writers, of our musicians and last but not
least the commitment of our South African producers.
The success of “Tsotsi” should see the commencement of
a dialogue about to the art of scriptwriting. We want to tell many
more South African stories. We want to hear authentic South African
voices interpreting and purveying our experience as a country, a
nation and as a people to the rest of humanity.
Gavin and his team have shown us that we can!
Thank you.
Issued by: Ministry for Arts and Culture
17 March 2006