Showing posts with label Silwerskermfees. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Silwerskermfees. Show all posts

Saturday, April 2, 2022

2022 10th Silwerskermfees Film Festival - Day 4: M-Net boss Jan du Plessis: 'We're fully committed to growing local film.'


by Thinus Ferreira 

As the channel director for MultiChoice's M-Net channels on DStv, the veteran industry executive Jan du Plessis is the boss of M-Net but you can literally call him "Mister Silwerskerm" - and many have and do.

Jan du Plessis has been involved with the Silwerskermfees film festival since its very inception more than a decade ago.

At the 10th Silwerskermfees, taking place at The Bay Hotel in Camps Bay, Cape Town, I spoke to him about how there's never been more opportunity than right now for local filmmakers and local talent across Africa to shine and how MultiChoice and M-Net remain firmly committed to continuing to invest heavily in local film production across the continent.


What advice do you have for aspiring and existing filmmakers as the local and international film industry is emerging from two years of lockdowns and a global Covid pandemic. What should they do now?
Jan du Plessis: It's really honing in on the story they want to tell. 

Be authentic, be true to your idea. Don't write something you think someone might like - stick to your story. The moment that truth, that authenticity comes across - I've been in thousands of pitches in my life and you immediately within the first few minutes you see when a person knows what they're talking about, they know the topic or they're incredibly passionate about it.

When you read a script and it hasn't really grabbed you in the first 15 or 20 pages, then you know it's not going to grab you later on. It's about authenticity.


What is a trend in terms of how the global film industry has now changed and got damaged? What is happening now that wasn't the case before Covid?
Jan du Plessis: When we look back years from now we will realise that we were actually part of a very prominent, historical moment in cinema. 

What I mean with that is when you just look at prior to Covid, there was this bubbling and growing and really incredible independent film markets and production.

Then suddenly the pandemic and that lower budget film started making less and less money and it became far more difficult to fund these films.
If you then look at the results of films over the past two years, it is Spider-Man, it is franchises. All these big films make lots of money, then suddenly where there used to be this wonderful middle-ground for independents disappeared.

Then when you bring it back to the South African context, it's even more prominent.

We've got less than a handful of films the last two years that have made lots of money, including Spider-Man: No Way Home which by the way, fascinatingly, has made more money than films released prior to Covid. But then it just drops and there's nothing. 

I have lots and lots of conversations, daily, weekly with the two distributors because we obviously help them to buy and then we identify product for them, and they are massively concerned because where a film used to make R5 million and they could collect R5 million - and these people are very clever, they're experienced and they get it right far more than what they get it wrong - so those R5 million South African box office films are suddenly barely R1 million.

And the lower millions range films - which are the films we love, the art house and more audience challenging films - used to make R800 000 to a million and those barely break that level now. So it's so scary. 

The result of that - if you look at what films are available at the European Film Market (EFM) earlier this year and that's coming to Cannes now in May, you will see in the past there used to be 50 to a 100. Now there's 20. 

And then the streamers with big, big pockets just take worldwide rights. The moment there's a John Wick: Chapter 4, these big-pocket over-the-top (OTT) players come and grab them.




What have you picked up from the 10th Silwerskermfees - how does it feel or look different?
Jan du Plessis: For two years we were planning every 6 months a Silwerskermfees film festival and then it couldn't happen. And last year we had a virtual webinar. 

In the meantime, in our back pockets, we were finishing a film and then keeping it for this festival, and three or four of these films had stop-starts because of Covid, and financially the impact was massive as it would add huge sums to budgets that were already stretched.

The fascinating thing is then when you look at this variety of films spanning so many genres at this year's film festival. We have Gaia as the first Afrikaans ecological horror film, we have a romantic comedy - I'm thrilled that it all came together. I'm relieved and surprised and very proud.


Why is it important for the local film festival in South Africa, like a Silwerskermfees, to exist?
Jan du Plessis: This festival has really been operating as an incubator, especially the short film project typically has been a fantastic incubator for new local films and new talent.

I'm obviously very proud to expose the new films to a new crowd and for them to get their moment in the limelight but for the M-Net and kykNET it's a fantastic moment to identify new talent and tho showcase new talent. It's a wonderful thing to be proud of and to have these five very diverse, very different, very uniquely South African films, shown all at once in one place.

Very interesting are all these talks and all these international companies that are now noticing our films, attending our festivals and acquiring international distribution. We've been noticed - both because of the films and because of the international co-production series.

I was at The London Screenings, the London upfronts market focused on TV series, a month ago and I can't tell you how every single person who I was in the past just buying content and asking "What's new? Show me your new BBC Western series The English with Emily Blunt?", would barely finish pitching new product to me when they would now say "But I want to introduce you to our head of co-production who is very interested in South Africa and here is so-and-so.".

One of the very proud things I'm very thrilled about is that one of our M-Net Original series, Reyka from Quizzical Pictures, got sold to Channel 4 in the United Kingdom and has actually been scheduled in their prime time drama slot on a Sunday night with a massive marketing campaign.
I think it took a while but we're getting there. We've been noticed.




You're an iconic industry veteran - you've seen everything over decades. But is there maybe something new you've seen or a new awareness you're taking away from or a new impression from this year's 10th Silwerskermfees?
Jan du Plessis: I really find that the more we've been going through these years in developing product and giving people chances to realise their dreams - and although you guide, it's not interference - you try to help people to get their product to the level they dream it could be - for me the thing that surprises me is the really bizarrely uniqueness of the ideas that came out of our talent this year.

You look at a film like Gaia and you think oh my goodness, how did you think this up? Or you look at Stiekyt and it's just fascinating. 

I think just when you think the level of creativity, the level of finding brand-new things that the world will take notice of has peaked, there are these South African filmmakers who step forward with these amazingly weird and wonderful things. 

And that's what cinema is about - it's about surprise. You want to sit there and be surprised. You want to go: "Yes, it's another romantic comedy, but wow, I've never seen this story or this story told this way." 


M-Net also has M-Net Movies as a strong brand, and MultiChoice is increasing its investment in local content in South Africa and countries across sub-Saharan Africa - is funding and creating local films still important within that overall mix of the local content offering? How does creating new local movies fit into that strategy?
Jan du Plessis: If you look at the research, consistently two of the reasons why people subscribe to our service are sport and movies.  
 
Over the years movies have gone through ups and downs but at the moment M-Net's movie channels continue to feature in the top 10, top 5 channels in many cases. 

What I find fascinating is that movie channels 3 and 4 - where 3 is targeted to the DStv Compact audience and 4 for DStv Access - and you look at the target audience, they actually watch 3 and 4, they compete with one another and for a channel not designed for that. 

So we're absolutely, fully committed, we're constantly looking at new deals, we're constantly renewing deals, we're constantly buying everything we can place our hands-on in the movie space.
Then on the local side, the mass market channels invest massively in Southern Africa, also East and West Africa, and then you also have kykNET. 

kykNET now has three sets of movies - there's the short film, and then the hour-long made-for-TV movie that really school people and train them and gives them an opportunity to make a film, and then the feature film like the ones shown at the Silwermskermfees film festival.

I feel there's never been more opportunity than now for local producers, local directors, local talent in front of and behind the camera. 

On top of that, we have to really be one step ahead because there are the OTT players who come with big pockets.

Our unique selling proposition is definitely to have local content and be hyper-local and to give viewers recognisable, aspirational stories where they can watch and feel "this is me. I recognise myself".


2022 10th Silwerskermfees - Day 1: Programme director Ricky Human on the growing need to tell authentic local stories.


by Thinus Ferreira 

It was on a night late into November 2021 and during a crunch time for everyone to complete their annual workload before their holidays while her little puppy was howling next to her on the floor also to get attention and not understanding why she was still up as she had to stay up past 23:00 in a virtual meeting with eight key execs on festival objectives.

It was the moment that film producer and festival programme director Ricky Human realised that the Silwerskermfees is really a passion of hers to organise.

The 10th Silwerskermfees Film Festival  – an Afrikaans film festival nicknamed "Cannes in Cape Town" but not limited to just Afrikaans films and content – is bouncing back with a hybrid, real-world and virtual offering stretching over three days from today at Cape Town's The Bay Hotel.

"With the Silwerskermfees we have successfully built a local interest platform and network for local filmmakers to showcase their works, gain exposure and build their own film careers to support our ethos to grow and sustain the local film industry," says Ricky when I ask her why it's important for a film festival like the Silwerskermfees to exist.

She's adamant: "Our focus will always remain local with international interest".

"The Silwerskermfees stimulates the industry with fresh ideas and a pipeline of continuous content and gives producers and film talent – behind and in front of the camera  – the opportunity to be recognised in the South African film industry and on international platforms."

"In terms of the full-length premieres, the festival generates publicity and a buzz around the films before the films' releases in cinema or on MultiChoice's DStv BoxOffice."

Many prolific and esteemed South African filmmakers have taken their first steps into the industry with the Silwerskermfees' short film project.

"To mention two examples out of many: Amy Jephta, whose most recent film Barakat was this year's official South African entry for the Oscars, was a previous Silwerskermfees short film winner with the 2017 short film Soldaat."

"After winning the Best Short Film category in 2013 with the movie Toevlug, Christiaan Olwagen also went on to create feature films such as Kanarie and Poppie Nongena, which won several international awards."

"Then, some of the short films have also been adapted into feature films - as is the case with Beurtkrag and Vlugtig, which premieres at the festival this year," Ricky says.


Covid-19's spoke in the film festival wheel
Instead of continuous operation and with planning ongoing for a next year's festival the moment a given year's festival is done, film festival organising globally ground to an immediate halt in 2020 because of the Covid-19 pandemic.

kykNET had to stop the Silwerskermfees as well that is now taking its first gingerly steps back as a hybrid event.

"The most significant disruption during this pandemic was the 'stop/start' experienced by the productions during filming," Ricky Human says.

"We are fortunate to be able to showcase such a great variety of local content. From an operational point of view, we have such a dedicated and committed team that never lets their guard down, and each stumbling block is negotiated and resolved amicably."

"Fortunately - and similar to many other film festivals - we were able to host a very successful Silwerskermfees Webinar on a virtual platform last year, and this year we are able to celebrate our 10th anniversary festival as an exciting hybrid festival."

About how this year's Silwerskermfees will be different, she says "The real difference for our festival on the ground is our limited venue capacities due to Covid protocols. Still, the level of excitement overall is higher than ever before with such a long waiting period to celebrate the festival returning.".

About what a film festival like the Silwerskermfees, and other South African film festivals need more of, and the type of support required and that could be improved, she says "All local film festivals, including the Silwerskermfees, can only grow when they are fully funded, and this always happens through several sponsorship partners, government-supported film bodies and private sponsors".

"Looking forward, we would like to add more genres and opportunities for local filmmakers to participate in the festival and grow local audience participation."




Pushing boundaries
"For me, it's always about the programme and how to inspire our filmmakers to showcase their works to others," says Ricky Human.

"In particular, we are proud to have Academy Award-nominated and winning films from 2021 as part of the line-up: Barakat, which has already scooped several awards and was South Africa's official entry for the Academy Award; as well as Lakutshon Ilanga (When the sun sets), the Student Academy Award winner and premiere at our festival."

"Then there is also the Academy-nominated documentary front-runner for 2022, Writing with Fire, which will be screened at the Silwerskermfees just three days before the Oscar winners are announced!"

"How wonderful it is also to have our own Silwerskermfees awards night event the day before the Academy Awards will place in Los Angeles," says Ricky.

Some of this year's Silwerskermfees short films are pushing boundaries and creating talkability. The number of short films in Afrikaans is also much more than in previous years."

"Then, we're also incredibly proud to be able to allow film lovers from across the country to enjoy all the films from anywhere in the country. This is the first time we are doing this, and the interest has been overwhelming, showing that there is an appetite for proudly South African films."


Ongoing quest to find new voices
While kykNET's Silwerskermfees is primarily about celebrating Afrikaans film, it's not exclusively Afrikaans. 

About why it's been important to not have a film festival ensconced around Afrikaans but to make it accessible to a broad, local multi-language community and film industry in South Africa, Ricky Human says the festival was a kykNET initiative with a focus on diversifying talent and finding new voices from the Western Cape and grew from there.

"Through all the festival initiatives over the years, it has organically grown to a multi-cultural, local interest festival. Collaboration is a given, and the goal of the festival ultimately is to sustain the local industry at large."

And her message for South Africa's film and TV industry about this year's 10th Silwerskermfees film festival?

"Don't shy away from telling authentic local stories as there is a growing need for it - not only locally but also on international platforms."


Wednesday, March 30, 2022

kykNET opens pitching process for short films for its 11th Silwerskermfees film festival in 2023.


by Thinus Ferreira

kykNET has opened the short film pitching process for its 11th Silwerskermfees film festival that will be taking place in 2023.

The 10th Silwerskermfees that was held last week at The Bay Hotel in Camps Bay concluded on Saturday night with the award ceremony, with the film festival that returned after a two-year absence since it last took place in 2019.

South African filmmakers can now pitch ideas for possible short films, with dialogue that has to be 80% in Afrikaans. Films can span any genre, from comedy and drama to animation and thrillers. The entry fee is R350 and entries close on 3 May 2022.

Filmmakers who want to pitch can enter on www.silwerskermfees.co.za and register. 

Concepts for the short film section at the film festival need to be between 250 and 300 words and must include the duration of the film - which needs to range between 3 minutes to 30 minutes.

M-Net will deliberate over the short film pitches and decide which pitches will be greenlit to be produced into short films.

According to kykNET, the top 40 concepts will be selected later in May this year after which another selection process during a second phase will whittle down the entries further, after which producers will get the opportunity to expand the text, create a production budget and do a director's presentation.

Pitches that are successful after this phase will receive short film financing, as well as guidance and mentorship from the Silwerskermfees organisers to turn their concepts into short films for the 11th edition of the film festival.

Selected short films have to be completed by November 2022.

Monday, October 25, 2021

kykNET still silent over whether its Silwerskermfees is still on or off for 2021 or what's happening with its film festival this year.


by Thinus Ferreira

M-Net's Afrikaans language channels division is silent and not telling South Africa's TV and film industry or the media anything regarding either the continuation or cancellation of this year's kykNET Silwerskermfees for 2021, with the film festival that looks like it has been scrapped for the year.

kykNET didn't respond with any official answers to a media query TVwithThinus made just over a week ago asking about whether 2021 will still see a kykNET Silwerskerfees being held.

November is the only late-in-the-year month remaining for a possible film festival, with December essentially a write-off month as the film and TV industry worldwide shuts down for the silly season and vacation.

It's also unclear, if the Silwerskermfees were to take place, whether it would be in-person, a hybrid, a virtual webinar, and if it would be branded as the 10th or 11th kykNET Silwerskermfees.

In 2020 the kykNET Silwerskermfees was turned into an online webinar series in 2020 because of the global Covid-19 pandemic, with the 9th kykNET Silwerskermfees that took place as an in-person event in August 2019.

In July, responding to a similar media query about the Silwerskermfees' future in 2021, Suzaan Keyter, kykNET spokesperson told TVwithThinus that no dates have been announced yet. 

"Plans are still underway but we are keeping tabs on the unfolding situation before we make any announcements. We have several options and dates for the film festival as well as the content. Planning continues behind-the-scenes for three different options," she said.

The kykNET Silwerskermfees website at www.silwerskerm.tv lists "Tuesday 24 - Saturday 28 August 2021" - a period that came and went without anything announcement from kykNET.

The website contains no information, with no notifications or advisories for the industry about what's happening with the film festival in 2021.

Over the past half a year, various people working across South Africa's TV and film industry, from filmmakers to crew and on-screen talent who are interested in the film festival, have asked TVwithThinus what is happening with the kykNET Silwerskermfees in 2021 and whether it is still going to be taking place.

The MultiChoice Group and M-Net scrapped and cancelled plans for both the 2021 African Magic Viewers' Choice Awards in Lagos, Nigeria and the 2021 DStv Mzansi Viewers' Choice Awards in Johannesburg this year because of Covid-19.

In June the 23rd 2021 Encounters South African International Documentary Festival took place as a virtual film festival.

In July the 12th Durban FilmMart took place as a virtual online event, similar to 2020, with the DFM that was followed by the 42nd Durban International Film Festival (DIFF) in late July that was accessible as a free virtual event.

In May, the National Film and Video Foundation's 15th South African Film and Television Awards (SAFTAs) returned from 2020's botched virtual online broadcast back to a televised awards show, but did so without an in-person audience. 


Tuesday, July 6, 2021

As the Cannes Film Festival continues Africa’s battered film festival circuit faces a fraught future.


by Thinus Ferreira

With France's 2021 Cannes Film Festival starting today, Africa growing film festivals circuit is still grappling with big existential questions amidst the ongoing global Covid-pandemic, like kykNET's Silwerskermfees that hasn't announced dates or details for the year yet but that is considering three different options.

The past few months, South African film festivals and African award shows that had to stop their plans for physical get-togethers and events dead in their tracks in 2020 due to Covid, have been contemplating on the best ways to navigate a basically impossible set of circumstances.

While Germany's 71st Berlin International Film Festival just concluded its Berlinale Summer Special as a series of screenings at 16 outdoor locations across Berlin and Cannes kicking off with saliva Covid-tests at the French Riviera, Africa's film festival and award show organisers are caught in circumstances marking a stark difference to their European counterparts.

While first-world countries like France, the United States and the United Kingdom are trying and starting to return to whatever the "new normal" is, the rate of providing Covid-vaccinations has been extremely low in Africa while the continent is being ravaged by a dangerous third wave of the Delta variant and an escalating count of cases and deaths in countries ranging from South Africa and Kenya to Nigeria.

The sudden press of the pause button in 2020 on the growing film festivals and award shows industry in South Africa has already cost thousands of permanent and part-time jobs and crippled several event organising companies, while depriving the continent's filmmakers of much-needed opportunities for exposure of their work, possible sales and networking, as well as the chance for educational and upskilling sessions.

While MultiChoice still squeezed in the 2020 African Magic Viewers' Choice Awards in Lagos, Nigeria - where people tested Covid-19 positive - as well as the 3rd 2020 DStv Mzansi Viewers' Choice Awards in Johannesburg, South Africa, with both ceremonies taking place on 14 March last year, MultiChoice and M-Net have scrapped any plans for these awards shows for 2021.

A new One People International Film Festival in Cape Town in late-April had to settle for a low-key hybrid in-person event and online screenings, with cinema showings at Nu Metro Canal Walk, while the International Tourism Film Festival Africa was held in June at the Labia Theatre in Cape Town.

In May, the National Film and Video Foundation's 15th South African Film and Television Awards (SAFTAs) returned from 2020's botched virtual online broadcast back to a televised awards show but without an in-person audience. 

The 23rd 2021 Encounters South African International Documentary Festival in June took place as a virtual film festival for 10 days, after which South Africa's government announced an adjusted Level 4 lockdown forcing the struggling cinema sector to shutter yet again, with all Ster-Kinekor, Cine Centre, Nu Metro, and independent film theatres that remain closed.

From 16 to 25 July the 12th Durban FilmMart will also take place as a virtual online event, similar to last year.

The DFM will be followed by the 42nd Durban International Film Festival (DIFF) from 22 July to 1 August 2021 that will be accessible as a free virtual event.

That leaves the annual kykNET Silwerskermfees, usually taking place in August in Cape Town's Camps Bay and that's modeled on France's Cannes Film Festival

The Silwerskermfees was turned into an online webinar series in 2020 because of Covid with M-Net that hasn't yet announced any plans for this year's Silwerskermfees but that is considering three different film festival options.

Suzaan Keyter, kykNET spokesperson tells TVwithThinus in response to a media enquiry that no dates have been announced yet. 

"Plans are still underway but we are keeping tabs on the unfolding situation [regarding Covid] before we make any announcements. We have several options and dates for the film festival as well the content. Planning continues behind-the-scenes for three different options," she says.

Tuesday, August 27, 2019

Wesgro film promotion boss Monica Rorvik says festival synergy with kykNET's Silwerskermfees continues to help the film industry grow and with local job creation.


Wesgro, the official tourism, trade and investment promotion agency for Cape Town and the Western Cape, was once again a part of M-Net's 9th kykNET Silwerskermfees, with Monica Rorvik, the head of Wesgro's film and media promotion unit, who says that its collaboration with the film festival continues to help grow the film industry and with local job creation.

"The Silwerskermfees has invited the team at Wesgro for the last few years to attend the festival as guests, in order to observe, and take meetings with industry," says Monica Rorvik.

This year's 4-day Afrikaans film festival was the biggest one yet with the Silwerskermfees that lured film and TV executives, filmmakers and producers, actors, the media, film support services and writers from across South Africa and Southern Africa - including many who don't speak Afrikaans.


"Its been a great place for Wesgro to stimulate industry – from taking meetings with top producers coming here to scout; to watch master classes - Zev Foreman's class is online and still give fantastic insights to the American model) - to meeting local filmmakers needing some advice on how to grow their business," says Monica Rorvik.


"Thus, when the opportunity to assist the festival to grow their footprint came through earlier this year, the team jumped to make it happen," she said.


"The synergy between our Wesgro-organised and First National Bank (FNB)/Rand Merchant Bank (RMB)-hosted annual finance workshop, seemed to be the place to link-up."

"The finance workshop, over these last 4 years, had outgrown the premises at the FNB Port Side House and we were oversubscribed."

"This year we were able to host 400 people to listen to 3 hours of well-paced talks, and followed by 2 hours of curated 'hot desks' for in-depth questions for the speakers," says Monica Rorvik.

"M-Net gave 3 hot-tables of executives, the National Film and Video Foundation (NFVF), the Industrial Development Corporation (IDC), and our legal, packaging and finance experts each had one table."

"My colleague Lisa Mini and I are hopeful that this sort of festival industry synergy can continue and develop companies’ growth and local job," says Monica Rorvik.

In his opening speech kicking off this year's film festival, JP Smith, Cape Town mayoral committee member representing the city’s film events team, said that in the last 9 months Cape Town's film office received 11 726 film bookings, compared to 11 350 for the comparative, preceding time.

 “Of those the film office issued 6 902 permits for a variety of locations around the city so this industry is steadily growing year on year," JP Smith said. “What we do need now is more places for you to shoot and we’re hard at work at creating additional facilities for you.” 


ALSO READ: 4 takeaways from kykNET's 9th Silwerskermfees Afrikaans film festival.
ALSO READ: IN IMAGES. 28 photos of kykNET's 2019 9th Silwerskermfees Afrikaans festival held at the Bay Hotel in Camps Bay, Cape Town.
ALSO READ: kykNET announces short film nominees for 9th Silwerskermfees with Die Begrafnis in the lead followed by Gebles and Oedipus Die Musical.
ALSO READ: kykNET announces feature film nominees for 9th Silwerskermfees. 

Sunday, August 25, 2019

4 takeaways from kykNET's 9th Silwerskermfees Afrikaans film festival.


It's not quite Cannes - but it isn't trying to be.

Again taking place as in previous years on the other side of Victoria Road at Camps Bay Beach in Cape Town, kykNET's just-concluded 9th Silwerskermfees Afrikaans film festival for 2019 was the biggest one yet.

The 4-day Silwerskermfees, or Silverscreen festival, continues to grow as the African continent's only film festival organised by M-Net's Afrikaans channels division, dedicated to promoting and celebrating Afrikaans language film and its industry in South Africa.

Beyond specifically supporting Afrikaans, the Silwerskermfees has grown to become an inclusive umbrella film festival helping filmmakers and producers, on-screen talent, writers, industry executives and a wide variety of people employed in the film and TV production and related services value chain to connect, attend master-classes, and to workshop and learn more from panel discussions on a wide range of industry topics.

"Right from the start, kykNET had a long-term vision with this special project. The Silwerskermfees' focus has been, and will always be, the South African and Afrikaans film industry," said Karen Meiring, director of kykNET channels at M-Net.

"The festival has generated positive energy and results, organically growing in size and influence. This year the festival spread its wings even further with screenings opened to the general public in the Theatre on the Bay and the Labia, inviting film enthusiasts to become part of the experience."

"Afrikaans films and content have huge potential internationally because it is authentic and represents a diverse South African community in a unique African language. There is a great need to watch each other's work, to learn from each other and through this to grow," said Karen Meiring.

Jan du Plessis, director of M-Net channels said "the kykNET Silwerskermfees was a risk 9 years ago - as is every original film and TV project that M-Net gets involved it. But it has always been our mission to give a platform to creative talent - in front and behind the camera".

Here are 4 important takeaways from kykNET's 9th Silwerskermfees 2019 edition:


1. Making films but minding the money
"There's a growing recognition, awareness and focus under filmmakers to think of what will be happening to their film from the time they're envisioning and planning it, writing it, pitching it, producing it and marketing it," Jan du Plessis told TVwithThinus at the festival.

"It has always been a case of something being a 'passion project', then we show it to the world, and it hits or it doesn't. If you look at this year's Silwerskermfees there are a lot more projects based on things like books or real-life stories [Fiela se Kind, Toorbos, Griekwastad, Poppie Nongena, Die Verhaal van Racheltjie de Beer]."

"In order words, you hope to enter the film and consumer market with some type of awareness or a built-in audience or an appeal, which a film without it wouldn't necessarily have had."

"It's very interesting for me that when we start the pitching process, we immediately start by asking the person: 'For which market, which channel, where would you place and play it, what are comparative titles?'"

"And then we go back to the person and say 'You mentioned these 10 titles saying your films is almost like them. Do you realise they performed like this at the box office - and it's likely not a lot - or it made this at DStv BoxOffice on TVOD, and these 10 films you mentioned have never been sold internationally.' Then we look at the budget and then we look at whether it's making business sense."

"If you look at the Silwerskermfees films, they're films that have a commercial approach for an international market."

"We have to start to ensure that our film budgets and marketing plans accurately represent the potential of the film, instead of just blindly making something."

"It's important to always still produce passion projects and to believe in certain stories to make it to film. I'm not saying we should stop doing that. But ensure there are enough hooks."

"And in terms of casting - who are the talent putting bums in cinema seats? Who are the actors who are big stars in soaps or who feature big here, or who feature big there? Ensure your film has angles," said Jan du Plessis.




2. A shift to a bigger business focus awareness under filmmakers
"The Silwerskermfees this year, the biggest thing I've noticed at the film festival is the shift towards a business-focus format in terms of bringing in an awareness of all of the business and strategy side that filmmakers need to put in place whether you're producing short films, features or documentaries," Shaamila Fataar, senior specialist for Showmax Originals, told TVwithThinus at the festival.

"The highlight for me at this year's Silwerskermfees was the film finance event with Wesgro and bringing in all of these different players from the banking sector to a broadcaster, an entertainment law legal firm - all sharing their knowledge and explaining to filmmakers and creatives that your movie is not just a content piece, it's not just a work of creativity, it's also a work of financial value."

"I think this is the cusp of a new generation of filmmakers who are going to be producing content with a financial model in mind, and not just for the sake of creating art," said Shaamila Fataar. "It's blending the two together."


3. A strong focus on remarkable women in front of and behind-the-scenes, as well as subject matter.
The debut feature films at the 2019 Silwerskermfees were true South African stories, beautifully told, with a focus on remarkable women.

Elsa Joubert's Poppie Nongena swept the award ceremony with 12 wins including for best feature film, while Racheltjie de Beer and Dalene Matthee's Fiela Komoetie came to life in a new 2019-version.

Two female directors, Jenna Bass [Flatland] and Rene van Rooyen [Toorbos] were at the helm of two of the films.



4. The celebration of non-Afrikaans speaking, black film talent
The big winner(s) at the 9th Silwerskermfees were not what South Africa would traditionally expect from an Afrikaans film festival. Instead of accolades for predominantly white Afrikaans mother-tongue talent, prize after prize at the 2019 festival went to non-Afrikaans speaking, black talent.

It reflects the progressive and extremely diverse nature of what kykNET's Silwerskermfees has become, which has expanded to become one of the most inclusive annual film festivals in South Africa.

The win of Poppie Nongena as 2019's best feature film - a harrowing depiction of the brutality and injustice of South Africa's apartheid system and reflecting the courage and fortitude of people in the face of hardship and difficulty - was accentuated by the recognition given to non-Afrikaans speaking talent who cleaned up across categories.

Clementine Mosimane won for Best actress, Chris Gxalaba won Best supporting actor, and Nomsa Nene won best supporting actress, with several more awards going to Poppie Nongena (12 in total, the most ever for a single film).

In addition, several other films and their on-screen and production talent scooped category wins at the Silwerskermfees - people who work in the industry and worked on Afrikaans films but who don't speak a word of Afrikaans.



ALSO READ: IN IMAGES. 28 photos of kykNET's 2019 9th Silwerskermfees Afrikaans festival held at the Bay Hotel in Camps Bay, Cape Town.

IN IMAGES. 12 photos of kykNET's 9th Silwerskermfees award ceremony featuring a 'Golden Globes'-type staggered tables seating arrangement.


kykNET's 9th Silwerskermfees film festival award ceremony took place on Saturday night in the Rotunda at The Bay Hotel in Camps Bay, Cape Town, where Poppie Nongena swept the show and scooped up a whopping 12 awards.

In a first-ever for the Silwerskermfees award ceremony, and in a first-ever in the history of South African award show ceremonies, kykNET went with a beautiful, staggered, multi-level tables seating arrangement that was still very functional with winners who were able to reach the stage quickly for acceptance speeches.

Filmmakers, TV and film executives, producers, the media, writers, on-screen talent and celebrities sat at white-linen candle-lit tables decorated with white orchids, and a DJ booth on the front-right side of the stage.

The Silwerskermfees award ceremony started with a hilarious and extremely clever spoof done by June van Merch and Bennie Fourie of an iconic scene in Fiela se Kind.














Poppie Nongena sweeps the 9th kykNET Silwerskermfees and bags 12 awards with biggest haul ever for a single film at the festival.


The haunting and visceral big-screen adaptation of Elsa Joubert's book, Poppie Nongena, on Saturday night swept kykNET's 9th Silwerskermfees, scooping up 12 awards - the biggest haul ever for a single film at the Afrikaans film festival.

Poppie Nongena, based on Elsa Joubert's Die Swerfjare van Poppie Nongena [The Long Journey of Poppie Nongena], cleaned up and swept all categories it received nominations in, with the legacy film winning for Best feature film, Best screenplay, Best director, Best actress, Best supporting actor, Best supporting actress, Best editing, Best cinematographer, Best hair and make-up, Best costume design, Best sound design and Best ensemble cast.

With June van Merch and Bennie Fourie as hosts who opened the awards held at The Bay Hotel in Camps Bay, Cape Town with a hilariously filmed skit recreating an iconic scene from Fiela se KindTobie Cronjé was honoured as this year's Silwerskerm legend for his contribution to the South African film and TV industry.

The South African born actor Arnold Vosloo, now living in the United States, and who flew to South Africa to present an acting masterclass and who was nominated for his lead role in Griekwastad, was announced as the first-ever patron of the festival.

Griekwastad, Flatland and Toorbos were all shut out of the awards with none of the three films managing to win any prizes while fan-favourite, Fiela se Kind that won the People's Choice award, only managed one other win for best original score for Kyle Shepherd.

Christiaan Olwagen and Saartjie Botha won for best screenplay for Poppie Nongena, while Christiaan Olwagen won for best director, Clementine Mosimane won as best actress, Chris Gxalaba won as best supporting actor, Nomsa Nene won as best supporting actress and Eva du Preez won for best editing for the film.

Vicci Turpin won as best cinematographer, Gale Shepherd for best hair and make-up, Sylvia van Heerder for best costume design, while Poppie Nongena also saw awards go to James Olivier, Richard West and Simon Ratcliffe for best sound design, and the film winning in the new category of best ensemble cast.

Helena Spring, Poppie Nongena producer on Saturday night said about the film "Two questions arose in my head. The one was: 'Is it still relevant?' And my heart overwhelmingly said yes. The other was: 'Will I be able to get it financed?'"

"I thought about it and the third question it lead to was 'What is the cost of not doing a film like Poppie Nongena?' There's so much commercial pressure on what films we're going to do and will it make money. The question should rather be: 'What would we have lost if Elsa Joubert didn't write this novel?"


Clementine Mosimane who won as best actress said "Poppie Nongena wasn't an easy movie to make and I believe it's still relevant for our country so that we can have a flashback, so that we can know what our destination is going to be like.We are only at the beginning, the end is still coming."

"Viva to all the women - black and white, Afrikaans and English, Sotho, Tswana, Xhosa."


Karen Meiring, director of kykNET channels at M-Net, said "The Silwerskerm film festival’s focus has been, and will always be, the South African and Afrikaans film industry".


Here's the list of winners of the 9th Silwerskermfees:

FEATURE FILMS
Best feature film
Poppie Nongena

Best screenplay
Christiaan Olwagen en Saartjie Botha – Poppie Nongena

Best director
Christiaan Olwagen – Poppie Nongena

Best actor
Stian Bam – Die Verhaal van Racheltjie de Beer

Best actress
Clementine Mosimane – Poppie Nongena

Best supporting actor
Chris Gxalaba – Poppie Nongena

Best supporting actress
Nomsa Nene – Poppie Nongena

Best production design
Chantel Carter – Die Verhaal van Racheltjie de Beer

Best editing
Eva du Preez – Poppie Nongena        

Best cinematographer
Vicci Turpin – Poppie Nongena

Best original score
Kyle Shepherd – Fiela se Kind

Best hair and make-up
Gale Shepherd – Poppie Nongena

Best costume design
Sylvia van Heerden – Poppie Nongena

Best sound design
James Olivier, Richard West, Simon Ratcliffe – Poppie Nongena

Best ensemble cast
Poppie Nongena

Web series
Deur die Blare

People’s choice
Fiela se Kind

Script search
Gerhard Marx – Asem
Reginald Hufkie – Kinderhuis kind
Nico Steyn – Skrop

Blitsfilms
Ilka de Beer – Cry/Huil
Melanie Tait - Ligspoor



SHORT FILMS
Best short film
Oedipus: Die Musical – ‘n Dokumentêr

Best screenplay
Luan Jacobs – Hoe om ‘n perd te teken

Best director
Stefan Benadé – Oedipus: Die Musical – ‘n Dokumentêr

Best actor
Luan Jacobs – Hoe om ‘n perd te teken

Best actress
Ansu Visser – Binnelandse Sake

Best supporting actor
Ludwig Binge – Oedipus: Die Musical – ‘n Dokumentêr

Best supporting actress
Ilse Oppelt – Janneman

Best production design
Idelette Jordaan en Nadine Minnaar – My Gelykenis

Best editing
Canya Cruywagen – Oedipus: Die Musical – ‘n Dokumentêr

Best Cinematographer
Janhendrik Burger – My Gelykenis

Best hair and make-up
Charné Burger – Oedipus: Die Musical – ‘n Dokumentêr

Best costume design
Juanita Ferreira – Die Begrafnis

Best sound design
Wesley Ayliffe – Binnelandse sake 

ALSO READ: kykNET announces short film nominees for 9th Silwerskermfees with Die Begrafnis in the lead followed by Gebles and Oedipus Die Musical.
ALSO READ: kykNET's Silwerskermfees 2019 releases the Camps Bay-set film festival's programme; British producer Peter Cowley, German filmmaker Dorothee Wenner, LA-based SA actor Arnold Vosloo all set to attend from 21 August. 
ALSO READ: 4 takeaways from kykNET's 9th Silwerskermfees Afrikaans film festival.