Going by the creative imagination of its organisers, there appears to be an offering for everyone at the on-going Africa International Film Festival (AFRIFF).
The festival recorded another feat on
Tuesday when, in partnership with Filmhouse Cinema, hundreds of school
children were hosted to the screening of an award-winning documentary
that was meant to make them see life differently.
Titled Born to be Wild,
not only is the documentary, based on the life of orphaned Orangutans
and Elephants who are rescued by humans and sent back into their natural
habitat thought-provoking, viewing the HD format film on the
larger-than-life IMAX screen would make an unforgettable experience for
the obviously enthralled kids.
The idea, which is in line with the
festival’s passion to educate the young ones through filmmaking, offered
the school children a first-hand experience of FilmHouse IMAX cinema.
According to Chioma Ude,
Founder/Executive Director of AFRIFF, this year’s line-up of events
offers a range of exciting new elements, of which involving future
filmmakers is one of them. The core of the festival, she said, is
training and how to involve the next generation.
“So we sat down and we thought of it and
we decided to get the secondary school kids involved. I am most happy.
The kids are happy and I was most impressed when a young boy said to me
that he googled the answer to a question I asked. And that is
where we are in today’s world. We chose a movie that would get them
thinking,” she said.
“I especially liked the fact that I got
to see Orangutans and Elephants in a whole new light; almost like
orphaned children. It gave me a sense of kindness towards them and some
sympathy. For me, it was both about the lessons I learnt from the movie
and the IMAX experience,” one of the kids said.
Another kid thought that it was really
nice seeing animals in a whole new light. “Today, I learnt that we
should treat animals the same way we treat humans and people should stop
killing animals so that they don’t have to leave their natural
habitat,” she said.
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