FADAFilm

FADAFilm

Friday, June 3, 2016

FADA Film Screens Miners Shot Down


FADAFilm Screens Miners Shot Down

Venue: FADA Auditorium
             FADA, Bunting Road Campus.
Date: Thursday 9 June
Time: 18:00 for 18:30


A film that will challenge all your ideas about what happened at Marikana [in August 2012]. Bold and well told. Margaret Renn Taco Kuiper Visiting Fellow in Investigative Journalism, University of the Witwatersrand


Miners Shut Down” is the most upsetting, unsettling and important film I have worked with for a long time. Never pathetic, Rehad Desai’s documentary left me in tears. Mette Hoffman  Commissioning Editor DRTV Denmark  
Engrossing. Moving. Angering. A must see. Mike van Graan leading South African playwright and former GS of Arterial Network 

Synopsis 1
In August 2012, mineworkers in one of South Africa’s biggest platinum mines began a wildcat strike for better wages. Six days later, the police used live ammunition to brutally suppress the strike, killing 34 and injuring many more. Using the POV of the Marikana miners, Miners Shot Down, follows the strike from day one, showing the courageous but isolated fight waged by a group of low paid workers against the combined forces of the mining company, Lonmin, the ANC government and their allies in the National Union of Mineworkers. What emerges is collusion at the top, spiraling violence and the country’s first post-apartheid massacre. South Africa will never be the same again.

Miners Shot Down will go places and will be referenced to " Salt of the Earth" of Herbert Bieberman (1954) and "Harlan County USA" of Barbara Kopple(1976). It has been a very long time since we have been exposed to a miners strike story told like this. Pedro Pimento, Former Director of the National Institute for Cinema, Mozambique.


After watching MINERS SHOT DOWN, a film that exposes via explicit video footage how police killed Marikana mine workers, I'm shocked that the South African government is still wasting tax money on a commission to prove who is guilty for the death of 34 miners. It is a no brainer. The police need to be jailed for murder. Yazeed Kamaldien, Freelance journalist



Director/Producer:
Rehad DesaiPhotography:
Nic Hofmeyr, Shadley Lombaard & Jonathan KovelSound RecordistPresident KapaEditors:Menno Boerema, Ruben van der HammenKerryn Assaizky, Megan Gill & Steen JohannessenOriginal Music:Philip MillerConsulting Producers:Brian Tilley, Bheki Peterson & Helle FaberProducers & Script:Anita Khanna & Rehad Desai
Awards:

  • The VACLAV HAVEL Jury Award, 2014. One World Human Rights Film Festival.
  • CAMERA JUSTITIA Jury Award, 2014. Movies that Matter, Human Rights Film Festival.
  • AUNG SAN SUU KYI Jury Award, 2014. Myanmar International Award
  • Special Choice Award, Encounters South Africa, 2014 International Documentary Film Festival.
  • Human Rights Jury Award, 2014. Amnesty International - Diff.
  • Jury Award for Best South African Documentary, 2014. Durban International Film Festival.
Was excellent. Genuinely one of those films every South African should see. Kevin Kriedemann, leading arts journalist and publicist

It is incredibly powerful and truly shocking. The footage of what is a cold blooded massacre is astonishing. What is really remarkable is that the film shows the whole incident from literally all sides. The forensic care with which both the immediate circumstances and the overall political context are explained make riveting viewing. It is impossible not to be both appalled and deeply moved by not only the human injustice but also the political tragedy which Marikana represents. It is an extremely important document not simply to understand the specifics of this incident but also to understand the profound challenges for South Africa. It is essential viewing. It is impossible to watch without feeling a profound sense of outrage. Lee Hall screenwriter Inter Alia of Billy Elliot



Synopsis 2
In August 2012, mineworkers in one of South Africa’s biggest platinum mines began a wildcat strike for better wages. Six days into the strike, the police used live ammunition to brutally suppress the strike, killing 34 and injuring many more. The police insisted that they shot in self- defense. Miners Shot Down tells a different story, one that unfolds in real time over seven days, like a ticking time bomb. 
The film weaves together the central point-of-view of three strike leaders, Mambush, Tholakele and Mzoxolo, with compelling police footage, TV archive and interviews with lawyers representing the miners in the ensuing commission of inquiry into the massacre. What emerges is a tragedy that arises out of the deep fault lines in South Africa’s nascent democracy, of enduring poverty and a twenty year old, unfulfilled promise of a better life for all. A campaigning film, beautifully shot, sensitively told, with a haunting soundtrack, Miners Shot Down reveals how far the African National Congress has strayed from its progressive liberationist roots and leaves audiences with an uncomfortable view of those that profit from minerals in the global South.


Well done to Rehad Desaiand all who worked on Miners Shot Down is a very strong and important film on a crucial issue. It must be widely seen in South Africa and across the world. Steven Markovitz, South African documentary and fiction film producer at Big World Cinema and co-founder of Encounters Documentary Film Festival .
This is a detailed, compelling, important and necessary film. A immensely powerful and tragic indictment of the ANC leadership, SA police and British mining firm, Lonmin. But as well as being a devastating exposé of the wholesale slaughter of scores of men it is a very moving celebration of the Marikana mineworkers, their dignity and their struggle in their search for a living wage. Beeban Kidron UK Filmmaker, also a Baroness for her work on building a youth Film Club network. 


About the Producer/Director
Rehad Desai is one of South Africa’s best-known documentary filmmakers and the CEO of a Uhuru Productions. A former political exile, Rehad worked as a trade union organiser and as a Director of a HIV prevention NGO before entering the film and television industry as a current affairs journalist. He has a Masters in Social History and post-graduate degree in TV and film producing (AVEA) and a  post-graduate diploma in documentary (Eurodoc). Rehad has directed over twenty documentaries, many of which have seen international broadcast and been accepted into numerous festivals, receiving critical acclaim. His current project, Miners Shot Down, is a synthesis of Rehad’s skills as a filmmaker and experience as an activist.

In 2000 he completed a post-graduate degree in TV and film producing through AVEA. In 2009 he completed a post-graduate diploma in documentary through Eurodoc. He has produced over 20 documentaries, many directed by himself that have been broadcast internationally, accepted into numerous festivals and been received with critical acclaim.

Filmography (Selected work)
Rehad Desai completed a history degree at the University of Zimbabwe where he lived for three years. In 1996 Rehad entered the TV and film industry as a Producer/Director and has since focused much of his energy on documentary productions, much of which has received critical acclaim . In 1997 he completed his Masters Degree in Social History at the University of the Witwatersrand. In 2000 he completed a postgraduate degree in TV and film producing through AVEA, in 2009 he completed a course in European Documentary Production through Eurodoc. He currently runs Uhuru Productions a film and TV company producing documentary and drama work and is the Festival Director of the Tri Continental Film Festival for the last 10 years and the Conference Director of the People to People International Documentary Conference

2010
Battle for Johannesburg - 72 min
Producer/Director
The Battle for Johannesburg captures the changing face of a city that’s preparing to host the 2010 FIFA World Cup. It’s a tale of property developers vying for sections of the crumbling city with renewed excitement, of a city council determined to create a world class city and ultimately of how this affects the hundreds of thousands of people who have made the city slums their home. SABC Ikon,Press TV, NHK, DR TV, YLE, NFVF, GFC, Urban Landmark. 
2008
The Choir,  54 – 76min 
Co Producer
Shot over four years, THE CHOIR is the story of Jabulani Shabangu and a group of fellow inmates who are battling to survive in Leeukwop Prison-- South Africa's largest prison.
  • Grand Prize at the Geneva Human Rights Awards,
  • Best Music Doc at Big Sky
  • Best Documentary direction at the the Australian Film Institute Award
2007
Bhambatha: War of the Heads 1906 - 72 min.
Producer/Director
Historical drama with documentary elements.
The story of the Bhambatha rebellion is one of resistance, heroism and ultimately of violent colonial conquest.  Unearthing the dramatic events surrounding the 1906 revolt in the colony of Natal exposes the spirits of our forefathers  whom, faced with escalating levels of oppression at the turn of the century, organised a formidable fight back. SABC/NFVF/Uhuru co- production.

2006
Bushmans Secret - 52 and 65 min.
Producer/ Director.
A documentary that looks at the exploitation of the intellectual property rights of the San Tribe in South Africa by the multinational Unilever, the concessions gained and the consequences thereof. Supported by YLE Finland, SBS Australia, Ikon Holland, ZDF-Arte Germany, RBTF Belgium, SABC2 South Africa, Media International Corp Japan, Television Espanola Spain,  NFVF South Africa, EED Germany, CWCI (European Union) and HIVOS. 
Zanzibar Film Festival, Silver Dhow , 2007
Amazonas Film Festival, Brazil – Jury Prize, Best Documentary, 2007

2004
Born into Struggle –52 and 74 min
Producer/Director
A personal documentary about the filmmaker’s relationship to his well-known father, a leader in the South African liberation movement, set against the backdrop of the struggle for South Africa and the transition to democracy.  Uhuru Productions , YLE 2, SBS Australia, TV2 Denmark,  RBTF Belgium, SABC1,  Jan Vrijman Fund, Africalia, NFVF, European Union CWCI, Fond Image Afrique, Mott Foundation 
  • Encounters Documentary Film Festival 2004. Best South African documentary Audience Award
  • Apollo Film Festival South Africa 2004 - Jury Winner 
  • World Cinema Festival Cape Town 2004 – Jury Winner  
  • Cannes Film Festival – official selection 2005
  • Durban Int. Film Festival Special Mention 2005

 The revelations of what we thought happened in Marikana and what actually happened, shown to us in this documentary was eye opening, in particular the viciousness of the State. The detailed look at the Marikana Massacre provided by ‘Miners Shot Down’ has prompted Numsa, that has a duty and responsibility to always take side of the working class and the poor, to a take a revolutionary stand against such repression. We can never allow this to happen again. As Comrade Nelson Mandela warned us, “Power corrupts, corrupts, and corrupts absolutely”. There is no basis for such an action by a democratic government, elected by the people for the people. The Freedom Charter rightly says, “no government can justly claim authority unless it is based on the will of all the people”. It does not say ‘based on the will of the bosses’. What Miners Shot Down revealed was that the Marikana Massacre was result of the will of the bosses and how in the capitalist system, the dominant class in society reproduces itself in the state, so that the state becomes an organ of oppression. It doesn’t matter who voted the government into power, once it is crunch time, the state takes side and when upholding capitalism, it is the side of the bosses. Miners Shot Down make it clear that it is time for answers and it is time for action, if this is to not be repeated again.Irvin Jim, General Secretary of the National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa


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