by Black Audio Film Collective
John Akomfrah of BAFC introducing the film 'Handsworth
Songs' presented at Document 5 film festival 20th October 2007, and
John in discussion afterwards.


Saturday
20th October 2007 5pm at CCA.
In association with DOCUMENT 5:
Human Rights Film Festival 17th - 21st October 2007
A rare opportunity to see a one-off screening of the legendary
‘Handsworth Songs’ by Black Audio Film Collective, which
Street
Level will present as part of Document 5 Human Rights Film
Festival at the CCA. The film’s point of departure is the civil
disturbances of September and October 1985 in the Birmingham district
of Handsworth and in the urban centres of London. Running throughout
Handsworth Songs is the idea that the riots were the outcome of British
society’s suppression of black presence and black
desire in Britain. The film portrays civil disorder as an opening onto
a secret history of dissatisfaction, associated with industrial decline
and the crisis of documentary as a mode of address. The term ‘Songs’ refers
not to musicality, but instead invokes the idea of documentary as a
poetic montage of associations, familiar from the British documentary
cinema of John Grierson and Humphrey Jennings. Inaugurated in 1982
and dissolved in 1998, the seven-person Black Audio Film Collective
is widely acknowledged as one of the most influential artist groups
to emerge from Britain in recent years. They have produced award winning
film, photography, slide tape, video, installation, posters and interventions,
much of which was dedicated to engaging with the past, present and
future of memory, media and moving image.
For more info on Document go here> www.docfilmfest.org.uk