Affair in Trinidad – A Film Review
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yY1FTVL-KbY?rel=0&w=560&h=315]
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yY1FTVL-KbY?rel=0&w=560&h=315]
It’s the most wonderful time of the year for film lovers. It’s Film Festival Season! The T&T Film Festival is on, and there are so many great local and regional movies to watch. Plus TTFF always includes world cinema on the roster. It’s a movie buff’s paradise. But when TTFF ends on the 27th September,…
October is Cancer Awareness Month, which is an annual global campaign to increase awareness of the disease. But that was not the reason behind featuring a special animated documentary on the subject at Animae Caribe Festival this year. It just worked out like that, with an amazing spate of coincidences and a twist of fate. ‘That…
The Contemporary Choreographers’ Collective or COCO is hosting their annual Dance Festival. I’m really excited to see them add a video element. Founding member of COCO Sonia Dumas, has become quite the filmmaker of late. Fresh off her win at #TTFF16 for a film development prize, this addition of film to COCO Dance Fest is…
The Trinidad & Tobago Film Festival is up and running. There’s great selection of films in the line-up. What I liked was Dr. Bruce Paddington’s statement that local films can support a National Buy Local campaign. And Flow’s Marketing Director Cindy-Ann Gatt says audiences like local and regional content. Not just films. She says they…
Film is having a moment in Trinidad and Tobago. The CFAFF is another film festival on the local calendar. This year’s theme is “Afro-diasporic Linkages and the Caribbean Voyage”. “A movement, a discourse, a space, a channel for cultural transformation and expression; the African Diaspora is a collective consciousness. As we continue our journey into…
Soy, I have a copy of this and some of the other “Caribbean films” that benefited from the Eady Levy like “Fire Down Below” and “Island In The Sun”. Bring out the popcorn and rum! Nostalgia is a hell of a thing. It is also an opportunity to see us through others’ eyes. Not very ennobling though. Juanita Moore’s Dominique was an eye opener for me for a film in that era.
I didn’t expect to like it. Not even a little bit, but the dialogue was just too good. You should have a film night, I haven’t seen any of the films on your list.