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    Local documentary Mother City picked up by international festivals

    Mother City, the hard-hitting South African documentary about the politics of urbanism, premiered internationally at the Sheffield International Documentary Festival, and at the prestigious Encounters South African International Documentary Festival, where it played to sold out houses.
    Image supplied
    Image supplied

    Since then, it has been in demand by audiences and festivals eager to engage with its content throughout the country and abroad.

    The film received special mentions from the juries at both these festivals, and was shown to a packed audience of industry peers at the recent Durban FilmMart.

    It had a special screening at the CineCentre GrandWest, Cape Town followed by a robust panel discussion hosted by Daily Maverick journalist, Rebecca Davis with Disha Govender, head of Ndifuna Ukwazi Law Centre; Nkosikhona Swartbooi, activist; Brett Herron, former Mayco Member for Housing, City of Cape Town, and Anthea Houston, CEO of Communicare.

    The London Renters Union, a campaigning union with branches across the UK, requested a special for the opening of their Housing Justice Assembly 2024 in London on 30 August 2024.

    Given the dire housing and land needs a robust impact campaign is created by the film makers and activists seeking various opportunities to screen the film to a wide and diverse audience in order to trigger discussion.

    Seasoned impact filmmaker Miki Redelinghuys of Plexus Films and veteran investigative journalist Pearlie Joubert, directed and produced the film with renowned feature-producer Kethiwe Ngcobo.

    Described as a beautifully observed, deeply human and often heart-breaking look at the politics of urbanism, the filmmakers spend six years documenting the activists of the dynamic Reclaim the City movement, as they transform two mothballed state-owned buildings in Cape Town’s into homes for more than 1000 people. The Woodstock Hospital was renamed Cissy Gool House by occupiers and the Helen Bowden nursing home in the Waterfront, Ahmed Kathrada House .

    “This is a classic David versus Goliath struggle, where activists challenge the powerful forces of politics and property. It has touched a nerve wherever we have screened the film and resonates deeply with audiences worldwide – this is not just a South African problem,” says Pearlie Joubert, who recently screened the film to the Renters Union in London.

    “All over the world people who are living on the edges are talking truth to power, taking their fight like the Reclaim the City movement - to the streets, the courts, high-end events, and governments determined to make their voices heard. We are hoping this film will create the necessary impact for activists as well as those in power whose decisions affect them, we want each and every person who sees this film to be moved to action,” says Redelinghuys.

    Where to see Mother City next:

    In Cape Town a short season will follow at The Labia Theatre in Cape Town on Sunday 8 September, 2.30pm and from Friday 13 to Thursday 19 September 8pm.

    Johannesburg public screenings take place at the CineCentre Killarney Mall from Wednesday 18 September at 7pm with a special screening with the Ahmed Kathrada Foundation with Daily Maverick’s Ferial Hafajee hosting a post screening panel discussion.

    It will screen at CineCentre on Friday 4 October at 7.30pm, Saturday 5 October at 5.15pm and Sunday 6 October at 2.30pm.

    International screenings and festivals include:

    • Sheffield: The Showroom Cinema in Sheffield 28 October

    • London: Bertha DocHouse in London requested to screen Mother City 29 October

    • Namibia: Film Week in Windhoek

    • Germany: Afrika Film Festival Köln

    • In Switzerland and USA in the next four months

    Tickets are available for Cape Town from Webtickets and from CineCentre for Johannesburg.

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