About 100 vehicles gathered in a Khartoum
parking lot across from giant screens showing Sudanese and
European films on Friday, the start of a week-long festival
organized by the British Council.
"We're watching films from our cars, and that's something that
has never happened before in Sudan," said Asmaa, among festival
attendees sitting inside, next to, and on top of their cars for
the nighttime screenings.
Once heavily regulated by the Islamist regime of former
President Omar al-Bashir, who was toppled in 2019, public spaces
in Sudan are being slowly reclaimed, helped by a re-ignited art
scene.
Films from Sudan's small cinema industry have won awards at
major festivals, and Sudan submitted its first film, "You Will
Die at Twenty", to the Academy Awards in 2020.
This week's festival expanded to include Sudanese films in 2018,
said British Council country director Robin Davies, but
precautions against COVID-19 prompted a change of format.
"I'm so happy that the festival has Sudanese films, and we
encourage all the creatives and young people to produce movies,"
said Rabab al-Haj, another moviegoer. "We need programmes like
this in Sudan."
(This story corrects name of British Council official in
paragraph 6)
(Reporting by Mohamed Nureldin, writing by Nadeen Ebrahim and
Nafisa Eltahir; editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise)
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