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Title Flame / California Newsreel presents ; Simon Bright/Joel Phiri present ; a co-production, Black & White Film Company, JBA Production, Onland Productions ; in conjunction with the European Union, Fonds Sud (France) ; International Film Festival Rotterdam ; written by Ingrid Sinclair with Barbara Jago, Philip Roberts ; produced by Simon Bright [and others] ; directed by Ingrid Sinclair
Published San Francisco, CA : California Newsreel, 1996

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Description 1 online resource (88 min.)
Summary Human Rights Watch Nestor Almendros Award. Flame is perhaps the most controversial film ever made in Africa -- certainly the only one to be seized by the police during editing on the grounds it was subversive and pornographic. Ingrid Sinclair's moving tribute to women fighters in the Zimbabwean liberation struggle aroused the ire of war veterans and the military because it revealed officers sometimes used female recruits as "comfort women." Flame's real crime may have been that it exposed not just past abuses but continuing divisions within Zimbabwean society. Many of the groups which fought hardest during the freedom struggle, for example, women and peasants, have been left behind in the post-revolutionary period; for them the revolution is still not completed. Flame provides an important and by no means unambiguous case study of who will control not only the depiction of the African past but also the African present. Director Ingrid Sinclair explains, "Fighting women are my heroes ... I used the independence struggle as a metaphor for the struggle for personal independence of all women." Originally conceived as a documentary, Flame had to be made as a fiction film because none of the seven women on whose experience it was based dared discuss sexual abuse on camera. Sinclair stresses that their experience is not the whole story of the Chimurenga or liberation war: "Flame presents only the views of one group of people ... Its legitimacy rests on whether it reflects that group's view rather than pretends to represent everyone's views - or worse be objective." It is, nonetheless, not surprising that male war veterans and current military leaders like Comrade Bornwell Chakaodza, Director of Information for the Zimbabwean Defense Forces, were outraged: "The film's failure to balance the negative scenes of the freedom fighters with their resilience and values suggests an insidious attempt to make sure future generations will have no sense of their gallantry." The fact that this, the first feature film on the Chimurenga, was directed by a woman and a white woman at that (albeit a long-time supporter of the Zimbabwean struggle) must only have aggravated their resentment. Even a woman ex-combatant commented, "If the war had been about rape, we would not have fought or won it." But another supported the film: "I, Freedom Nyamubaya, was raped and that is the truth. A society which denies the truth cannot move forward." To the credit of all involved, the film was released and the directors made some minor changes. Viewers can now decide for themselves whether the finished film reflects both the successes and unfinished tasks of this crucial phase of African history. Flame is the story of two close friends whose involvement in the liberation struggle lead to very different outcomes. Florence, impulsive and brave, and Nyasha, scholarly and cautious, are scarcely more than children when they run away from their village to join the liberation forces in 1975. After a harrowing trek to the rebel camps in Mozambique, they adopt their new guerilla identities: Nyasha becomes Liberty, representing her desire for independence, while Florence selects Flame, symbolizing her passion. The film accurately reconstructs conditions in the rebel camps: the extreme hardship and constant danger but also the unprecedented opportunities offered women for education and leadership. At the same time, it shows that leaders like the charismatic young political commissar, Comrade Che, often assumed that women would be available to them. When Flame resists his advances, he rapes her leaving her pregnant. But even Che is not portrayed one-dimensionally; he genuinely inspires his troops through political education and, after he apologizes to Flame, she (improbably) does not hesitate to become his lover. She is devastated when he and their infant son are killed in an aerial bombardment. After that, she has nothing to live for but combat and becomes a legendary leader of the Chimure
Notes Title from resource description page (viewed September 12, 2017)
Editor, Elisabeth Moulinier
Credits Director of photography, Joào (Funcho) Costa
Cast Marian Kunonga, Ulla Mahaka
Notes In English
Won 1996 Amiens International Film Festival, Audience AwardIngrid Sinclair
Won 1996 Amiens International Film Festival, Best Actress Marian Kunonga
Won 1996 Amiens International Film Festival, OCIC Award Ingrid Sinclair
Won 1997 Annonay International Festival of First Films, Grand Jury Prize Ingrid Sinclair
Won 1997 Human Rights Watch International Film Festival, Nestor Almendros Award Ingrid Sinclair
Subject Women soldiers -- Zimbabwe
National liberation movements -- Zimbabwe
National liberation movements.
Women soldiers.
SUBJECT Zimbabwe -- History -- Chimurenga War, 1966-1980. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh86007010
Zimbabwe -- History -- 1965-1980. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85149815
Subject Zimbabwe.
Genre/Form Feature films.
Fiction films.
History.
Feature films.
Fiction films.
Films de fiction.
Form Streaming video
Author Sinclair, Ingrid, director
Phiri, Joel, producer
Bright, Simon, producer
California Newsreel (Firm), presenter, production company.
Black & White Film Company, production company.