Location | 2012- : Córdoba, Andalusia, Spain 2004-2011: Tarifa, Spain |
---|---|
Founded | 2004 |
Language | International |
Website | http://www.fcat.es/FCAT_en/ |
The African Film Festival of Cordoba (formerly African Film Festival of Tarifa or FCAT) is an annual festival devoted to African cinema held in the Spanish city of Cordoba. It is organized by the NGO Al Tarab.
The event was founded in 2004 under the name of the African Film Showcase of Tarifa and changed its name to African Film Festival of Tarifa in 2007. Since 2012, it is known as the Cordoba African Film Festival-FCAT (Córdoba is the new host city).
The African Film Festival of Tarifa, also known by the acronym FCAT, was born in 2004 at the initiative of the NGO Al Tarab, based in Tarifa, in Cadiz province. During the first three years the event was intended as a sample of the best film production from Africa; at the 4th edition it became a competition Festival. The Festival was founded with the aim of publicizing a new image of Africa to the Spanish public, away from the stereotypes provided by the mass media. Tarifa was a meeting point and a symbolic geographic space for the meeting and exchange of cultures. The 9th edition of the Festival will be held in Cordoba, its new host city, and will offer 94 screenings coming from Africa as well as from the Arab countries, as a new feature in the event's programme. With the years, aside from cinema, the Festival has developed a wide range of associated activities such as visual art exhibitions, performances and participative workshops for children. The Festival programme also includes special screenings for the youth; this year around 6.000 children will participate. Since 2007, the Festival also features an area devoted to the film industry. It includes Africa Produce's forum for film co-production, a space intended to facilitate new agreements between audiovisual producers and professionals from the African and European continents. It also includes debates and round tables, this year especially aimed at brainstorming about new opportunities to build understanding between public bodies for film funding from both continents. Nowadays, the Festival's involvement with the African film industry has become one of the pillars of the event.
The Festival is divided into a number of competitive and non-competitive sections:
Each year the international feature film Jury decides to grant the following awards:
The international documentary and short film Jury votes the following prizes:
The Festival is not merely the projection of films during its days of programming: