The 19th edition of the African Diaspora International Film Festival screens in New York December 13,  2011  at Quad Cinema, Teachers College at Columbia   University Schomburg  Center 
An African Election (Jarreth Merz, Ghana/Switzerland, 2010)
Jarreth Merz’s revealing and meticulously crafted film examines in great detail, and with unprecedented access, the inner workings of the 2008 presidential election in Ghana 1pm  and 7:25pm  daily.  Jarreth Merz will appear for Q&A sessions on December 2, 3, and 4.
The Story of Lover's Rock (Menelik Shabazz, UK, 2011)
Music documentaries are a frequent fixture at ADIFF, and a great example is this year’s opening night film The Story of Lover’s Rock, which sheds valuable light on an underappreciated and largely neglected music movement in 1970’s and 1980’s Britain known as “Lover’s Rock,” which was a distinct genre of reggae music which originated among black British people who were born to immigrants from Jamaica and other parts of the Caribbean.  Lover’s Rock was a softer, more romantic version of reggae that was a sharp contrast to the harder-edged, political, Rastafarian influenced music coming from Jamaica Japan 9:40pm  daily.  Shabazz will appear for Q&A’s at the Quad on November 30, December 1, 2, and 3.
The First Rasta (Hélène Lee and Christophe Farnarier, France/Jamaica, 2011)
Jamaican reggae music is aesthetically, spiritually and politically permeated by Rastafarian ideology, which revered Ethiopian emperor Haile Selassie I, and advocated healthy living, organic living, and of course, ganja.  Many know at least this much about Rastafarianism; what most may not know about is the story of the man who began the movement, Leonard Percival Howell, who is largely forgotten, even by those who follow a Rastafarian lifestyle.  Howell is the subject of the impressively researched and eye-opening documentary The First Rasta, which seeks to uncover the hidden, and governmentally suppressed, history of the man who existed as a constant thorn in the side to Jamaica Jamaica Jamaica 5:25pm  daily.
Love Lockdown (Nadia Hallgren, US, 2010)
A little closer to home (New York City, that is) is the short documentary “Love Lockdown,” which addresses the impact of the radio show “Lockdown Love,” which is a forum for loved ones of incarcerated people.  “Love Lockdown” follows one woman, Shoshanna, who uses the show to send messages to her boyfriend Felix, the father of her children who is currently in jail, as she anxiously waits to hear if he will be given a 10 year prison sentence.  The film sensitively follows Shoshanna’s struggles to cope as a single mother, with the fate of her family, and the possible long absence of the father, threatened with the looming sentence that hangs like a scimitar over all their heads.  The voice of the DJ is a conduit for the most impassioned and heartfelt feelings of those like Shoshanna who use it to communicate with their lovers behind bars.  Behind this lies the backdrop of the overwhelmingly black and Latino makeup of those incarcerated in U.S. Columbia  University Schomburg  Center 
For more information on these and other festival films, and to purchase tickets, visit the ADIFF website.




 
