Killarney Film Studio Silent Film Studio South Africa / Photo Credit: Pinterest, Stage and Studio
SOUTH AFRICAN CINEMA… (In the Entertainment
industry. South African Cinema)
South African Cinema
The cinema of South Africa refers to the films and film
industry of the nation of South Africa. Many foreign films have been produced
about South Africa (usually involving race relations).
History (South African History Organization)
1895
The Kinetescope (invented by Thomas Edison) was a box in
which people could see a moving image. The first Kinetescopes in South Africa
were opened to the public on 19 April 1895 in Herwoods Arcade on Pritchard and
President Streets in Johannesburg - then a small town only nine years old. South
Africa was certainly one of the first countries in the world to see and hear
sound motion pictures. Lingards Waxworks in Durban, who exhibited a number of
mechanical novelties of the penny-in-the-slot variety, first showed them in
August 1895. One of these was a Kinetophone.
1896
Carl Hertz brought out a projector from England and
screened the first production at the Empire Palace of Varieties (in
Commissioner Street, Johannesburg) on 11 May 1896. The press was ecstatic.
Hertz introduced South Africa to the era of the "Bioscope" through a
series of 30-second films.
Edgar Hyman, an entertainer and pioneer filmmaker,
accompanied Hertz for six weeks on his tour of the country to study the working
of the Cinematopgraphe machine. Unfortunately biographical details about these
early pioneers are very sketchy.
1898
The Empire Palace of Varieties in Commissioner Street JHB
adopted film as a permanent part of its programme. Taken by Hyman, the films
were purchased from the Warwick Trading Company. They consisted mostly of views
of Johannesburg taken from the front of a tram. Another of Hyman's films showed
the President of the Transvaal Republic, Paul Kruger, leaving his house for the
Raadzaal. As Kruger climbs into his carriage, the carriage tilts dangerously,
because of Kruger's bulk! The film was included in the Warwick Trading
Company's catalogue, and was shown all over the world.
1899
The first Mutoscope, a peep show containing flick-over
books of photographs taken from Biograph films, was installed at 67 Pritchard
Street in Johannesburg. The first Biograph show was given on 24 May at the
Wanderers Hall.
On 14 October, three days after the declaration of South
African (Anglo-Boer) War, W.K.L. Dickson (who had perfected the motion picture
camera and had worked for Edison) set out for South Africa to record the war on
film. The use of film, as a new medium for propaganda, was discovered and
exploited during that war.
1903
Moving pictures had been showing for several years before
the production of dramatic films were undertaken. By 1903 it was possible to
distinguish between various types of films such as "topical,"
"humorous," and "dramatic".
1906
The first film on sport was screened at the Tivoli Music
Hall in Cape Town. It was of the England versus South Africa cricket match at
Newlands, apparently shot by an amateur cameraman.
1907
By 1907 dramatic films were firmly entrenched in every film
show. By 1908 the topical film was the most popular. Trick and comic film
popularity shifted to dramatic films.
1909
The Electric Theatre in Durban was the first permanent
theatre to be established in South Africa on 29 July 1909.
1910
On 11 December 1910 the first "Electric Theatre"
for "Colored People Only" was opened on the corner of Grey and Alice
Streets in Durban. The first programs showed scenes outside the mosque in Grey
Street. The Great Kimberly Diamond Robbery was released. It was the first South
African full-length feature drama film produced entirely in the country. The
Cape Town Pageant was filmed and screened extensively all over the country to
celebrate the Act of Union.
1912
Edgar Hyman established the Empire Theatres Company (South
Africa) Ltd; this was a year after Africa's Amalgamated Theatres was
established in 1911.
The first permanent bio-cafes opened in Johannesburg.
1913
Isidore W Schlesinger bought both Empire Theatres and
Africa's Amalgamated Theatres and several other companies and thereby formed
the African Theatres Trust Ltd on 10 April 1913. He also formed African Films
Trust, a film importing and distributing agency. On 5 May 1913 South Africa's
first newsreel, African Mirror, was screened.
1915
Schlesinger established African Film Productions Ltd;
Africa's first motion picture studio in the Johannesburg suburb of Killarney.
One of its earliest productions was De Voortrekkers (1916). Between 1916 and
1922 African Film Productions made forty-three films.
1921
Sam Wood's Under the Lash, starring Gloria Swanson, was
the first anti-South African film to be screened.
1923
H. de Vere Stacpoole's The Blue Lagoon was produced and
distributed by AFP. The first trailers (advertisements for forthcoming
screenings) started to appear.
1930
In August 1930 the first sound film of Black traditional
life, In the Land of the Zulus was screened. It was produced by African Film
Productions.
1931
The Capitol Theatre in Pretoria opened. At the gala
opening South Africa's first sound films - Joseph Albrecht's Sarie Marais and
Moedertjie - were screened. Afrikaans nationalism was emerging as a force, and
Sarie Marais portrayed the English/British cultural and economic imperialism
negatively (the desire to spread the British language, culture and influence
even where they were unwelcome). Schlesinger merged his interests with that of
Kinemas, which led to the establishment of African Consolidated Films and
theatres under the AFP (African Film Productions) banner. The National
Censorship Act of 1931 was passed by Parliament, followed by the Entertainment
Act, which demanded that all cinematic material be cleared before exhibition.
African Film Productions made the first sound
advertisement films in South Africa for Joko Tea and Pegasus products. The
first film society was formed in Cape Town.
1934
The first tourist film, a serial cinema magazine, Our
Land, was made by African film productions.
1936
The South African Censor Board came into being.
1938
William Boxer founded Alexander Films, South Africa's
first cinema advertising firm. Joseph Albrecht's celebration of the centenary
of the Great Trek, They Built a Nation/Die Bou van 'n Nasie was released.
1939
The African Mirror (started in 1913) got sound in July
1939. On August 31 the Germans invaded Poland and World War II broke out. The
war accelerated Afrikaner nationalism and motivated the movement to produce
culturally specific films. RARO, the Reddingsdaadbond Amateur Rolprent
Organisasie, was established in 1940. 1940 was a decade when Afrikaans
nationalism reached new levels of intensity, and found expression in a number
of Afrikaans-language films.
1942
RARO released its first two full-length features. The
following year the Cilliers/Haarhoff/Mushett Commission's report recommended
the establishment of a South African National Film Board.
1947
The church-funded CARFO/KARFO film company was
established.
1948
Cecil Kellaway became the first South African actor to be
nominated for an Academy Award as Best Supporting Actor in Henry Koster's The
Luck of the Irish, but lost to Walter Huston in The Treasure of the Sierra
Madre.
1949
Pierre de Wet's Kom Saam Vanaand, South Africa's first
musical film was released, and became a huge box-office success. It stared Al
Debbo and Fredrick Burger, who had a very deep bass voice.
Isadore W. Schlesinger died and left the company to his
son, John, who continued to expand and build upon the work of his father. The
first South African film with an all-Black cast, Donald Swanson's Jim comes to
Jo'burg /African Jim was released.
1950
"Nkosi Sikelel iAfrica" was first performed by a
choir on film in Zonk.
1951
Jamie Uys Daar Doer in die Bosveld, South Africa's first color
film, was released, as was Zoltan Korda's adaptation of Cry The Beloved
Country, based on the book by Alan Paton and starring Canada Lee and Sydney
Poitier. Dr Lionel Ngakane was assistant director.
1954
The South African Society of Cinematographers (SASC) was
founded.
1955
Film Production Facilities Africa, later to be renamed
Irene Film Laboratories, was established and the Schlesinger Organization
celebrated its fiftieth birthday. 20th Century Fox came on board as a major
stockholder.
Lionel Rogosin (South African born, but lived and died in
the USA) released his film Come Back, Africa. It was a docu-drama about
Sophiatown, featured a young Miriam Makeba, and was the first SA film to be
made covertly. South Africa also suffered its first film industry scandal this
year, when a film producer named Roger Bray pleaded for funds (mostly from
churches) to make a film on the life of Paul Kruger and then, without shooting
a frame of film, disappeared with the investors' money!
1956
A regulated subsidy system, that rewarded box office
success, was introduced. A specific amount of box office income qualified for a
refund as a percentage of the production costs. The subsidy system helped
several filmmakers to become rich overnight. Government and big business
collaborated to keep SA cinema a cinema for whites only; of the glut (60
films!) made between 1956 and 1962 most were in Afrikaans - four were bilingual
and the remaining 13 were in English. Some of these films were absurdly bad
screen translations of Springbok radio programs - Taxi, The Men from the
Ministry, Flying Squad, and Gold Squad - but they were enjoyed by lower middle
class white South African audiences. They were often screened in drive-in
cinemas, whose popularity soared in the 1960s. (Springbok radio was the English
language commercial radio channel - or 'station' as it was then called - of the
SABC. This, remember, was in the days before television.)
1957
Inrybelange (Edms) Bpk was established and was later
renamed Ster Films.
1959
African Film Productions was bought out by 20th Century
Fox and renamed South African Screen Productions. Satanskoraal, directed by
Elmo de Witt, was the first film to be filmed underwater.
1961
The South African Music Rights Organization (SAMRO) was
established.
South Africa's first western genre film, Ken Annakin's The
Hellions, was released. This was also the first co-production between South
Africa, Britain (Annakin was a British director) and the USA. Jamie Uys
co-starred and was also producer on the film. Talking Point: Why did so few
Black South Africans made films before the 1990s?
1963
The Publications Control Board (Censorship Board) was
established. Truida Pohl's Die Man in die donker (the first local film directed
by a woman) was released.
1964
Cy Endfield's Zulu was a worldwide success, but was banned
for screening to black people in South Africa.
Elmo de Witt's Debbie ran into trouble with the censors.
Based on a rather innocuous book called Groen Koring about a farm girl who gets
pregnant in the city, the rather puritanical censors objected to the portrayal
of an Afrikaans girl getting pregnant out of wedlock ... today it has no age
restriction
All the Way to Paris, directed by Jamie Uys, was the first
South African film to be filmed overseas.
1967
The 'no smoking in cinemas' era began in South Africa. Jans
Rautenbach and Emil Nofal's Wild Season was released. It was a milestone work
dealing with the generation gap between a forbidding fisherman and his bookish
son Die Kandidaat by Nofal and Rautenbach was released. It was South Africa's
first political thriller, and questioned the boundaries of Afrikaans identity.
1968
Majuba, about the battle of Majuba, was directed and
produced by Cape Town born David Millin, one of South Africa's most talented
filmmakers, and a director who insisted on accurate detail in his historical
films.
1969
The Kinekor organization was formed. Since 1962 Afrikaner
capital had been a significant factor in the industry: the insurance company
SANLAM acquired a major interest in Ster-Films and by 1969, Satbel (Suid
Afrikaanse Teaterbelange Beperk) was formed, and the financing and distribution
for films in South Africa were in the hands of one large company - except for a
few cinemas owned by CIC-Warner.
This year also saw the successful release of Katrina
(produced by Emil Nofal, who died in 1986, and directed by Jans Rautenbach).
Rautenbach took on the issues of race at a time when it was not easy to do so,
given his terribly conservative constituency. Katrina is about love across the color
line, and tells the story of a colored doctor and white woman who fall in love.
Filmed in Paarl and Cape Town, Katrina also features the invisible people of
Apartheid South Africa (blacks and colored’s) in the background, the sixties
slum neighborhoods’ tidied up and sanitized for the sake of the film.
Dirkie, which Jamie Uys produced, directed and acted in,
was also released.
1970
in this decade a further fragmentation in the industry
occurred when the so-called Bantu film industry was created: the black films
were of poor quality, made in ethnic languages, and were screened in churches,
schools and beer halls. Black and white audiences were treated differently;
audiences were separated, watching different films in vastly differing surroundings.
1970
David Millin made Shangani Patrol, and historical film
about an incident, which happened in 1893, in what was then Southern Rhodesia.
1972
Brigadiers Film Productions made Kaptein Caprivi. This
infamous, and with hindsight somewhat laughable film, features the late State
President CR Swart exhorting (white) citizens to make the supreme sacrifice for
South Africa, and hostage farmers held by Chinese terrorists - who just happen
to speak fluent Afrikaans. Kaptein Caprivi was the first of many film recruitment
drives for the South African Armed Forces. Others included Terrorist and
Aanslag op Kariba.
The same year saw the successful local and international
release of Emil Nofal's The Winners. It was one of the first local films to do
well overseas. The Winners is a drama about a man forced and driven to win at
all costs.
David Millin was admitted to ranks of the American Society
of Cinematographers (ASC). He was one of only two South Africans (so far) to be
admitted to this organization. The other was Johannesburg born Vincent Cox who
was the Director of Photography (DOP) on Wild Season, Die Kandidaat and
Katrina.
Killarney Film Studios - the buildings of the AFP - were
demolished to make way for shopping malls.
1973
Boesman en Lena, directed by Ross Deverish, was the first
feature film to portray the poverty and enforced removals of people classified
as "black". It won a gold and silver medal at the 6th Atlanta Film
Festival in the United States.
1974
Simon M Sabela's U'Deliwe was the first locally produced
film directed by a black person. It starred Sabela himself and also featured a
very slim and young Joe Mafela. Sabela died c. 1999. How Long made in 1975 was
the 2nd feature to be directed by a black male - playwright Gibson Kente - but
he reportedly got arrested on the last day of filming and the film was never
released.
The Publications Appeal Board was established.
1975
Andre Pieterse's e'Lolipop, directed by Ashley Lazarus,
was successfully released overseas. It won several international awards, as well
as the rapport Oscar for the best film in South Africa.
Jamie Uys' Beautiful People - which supposedly recorded
the natural behavior of wild animals, but was later dogged by accusations that
some scenes had been staged - won a Golden Globe for Best Documentary Feature
and was the first local feature to win an overseas award. The Metro Group of
cinemas was established. SABC commenced test transmissions in July.
1976
The first television transmission was made on 5 January
1976, and a new industry was born. Filmmakers rushed into television. SABC
became the hub of production. Many dramas and documentaries were produced, some
of which are still being rebroadcast in English on SABC Africa and in Afrikaans
on M-Net's Kyknet.
1977
The Guest, directed by Ross Devenish, won the Locarno Film
Festival, becoming one of the most acclaimed South African films. The film,
based on a play, concerns the last days of one of South Africa's most unique
minds - the writer Eugene N. Marais. Marais was addicted to morphine, and the
film describes his anguish, addiction and eventual suicide. Directed by Ross
Devenish, it stars Athol Fugard and Marius Weyers, and is also known as Die
Besoeker.
1979
Marigolds in August, also directed by Ross Devenish, was
released. The film was based on an Athol Fugard play, and starred Fugard
himself as well as John Kani. It won a special award at the 1980 Film Festival
in Uzbek, Russia, as well as two awards at the Berlin Film festival. It also
won a Rapport Oscar for the best local film of the year. Devenish left the
country soon after making the film, and spent the next 23 years in England,
returning to South Africa only in 2002.
A new subsidy scheme was introduced, stipulating that a
film had to earn a minimum of R100 000 at the box office within two years after
release to qualify for subsidy.
Afrikaans Films English Films
R200 000 70% 60%
R300 000 60% 50%
R400 000 50% 40%
A maximum of R300 000 could be earned through subsidies.
From 1957 the subsidy scheme was revised 10 times.
1980
The industry was further fragmented in the 80s: on the one
hand there was a blossoming of independent cinema, much of it highly critical
of apartheid. Films of this sort include The Road To Mecca, Die Storie van
Klara Viljee, Manie van Rensburg's The Fourth Reich, and the Darrell Roodt
trilogy: Place Of Weeping, The Stick and Jobman.
On the other hand, substantial tax concessions made
investing in film an attractive option and a boom occurred in the commercials
industry. Several hundred films were made, mostly inferior imitations of
American films. The tax scheme collapsed by the end of the 80s.
The anti-Apartheid independent films such as Place of
Weeping, Mapantsula and, Wind prints, were seen by only a few South Africans.
Even if they were not banned, the big distribution companies (Ster-Kinekor and
Nu Metro) would not touch them. Instead, they were distributed through a
sprinkling of independent venues. In fact, these films were more widely
screened overseas than they were in the country of their origin.
Since the 1980s Ster-Kinekor, Nu Metro and United
International Pictures have owned the majority of cinemas in SA. This meant
that these companies controlled the distribution of films here. They almost
exclusively showed films made in Hollywood (or in Europe) because films made
overseas were generally accompanied by slick and well-funded marketing campaigns
that got bums onto cinema seats and ensured a good profit for the cinema-chain.
As a consequence most South African cinemagoers were only exposed to foreign
films, and rarely got to see serious South African (or African) films.
1980
Jamie Uys' The Gods Must be Crazy and Ivan Hall's Kill
& Kill Again were successfully released. According to the Film Resources
Unit, none of the Khoisan people who appeared in The Gods Must be Crazy ever
received royalties from the film. A product of his time and context, Uys' work
effectively utilized the film medium, but his treatment of people (and animals
in Beautiful People) can be seen as both demeaning and exploitative.
1981
Video cassette recorders caused a revolution in the
industry, spurring on film rentals for home viewing, and giving birth to the
retail industry. This was followed by the launch of the black television
services TV2/3 by the SABC.
1984
Tax concessions for the export of films were introduced.
The more spent on export, the greater the amount written off against tax.
Saturday Night at the Palace received critical acclaim in
international circles. Based on the play by Paul Slabolepsky, it is about three
characters that meet at a roadhouse one night (two are white, the other is
black) and during the course of the film the bubbling pot of racial hatred
explodes, leaving one character dead. The film was directed by Robert Davies
and stars Paul Slabolepsky, Bill Flynn and John Kani.
Place of Weeping, directed by Darrel Roodt and produced by
Anant Singh became a landmark film both for the anti-apartheid movement, and
for alternative cinema in South Africa. Singh personally financed the film, and
it was the first anti-apartheid motion picture to be made entirely in South
Africa. Receiving worldwide acclaim, it was released theatrically in the United
States and most global territories. It was also the only South African film to
play on US TV channel HBO (Home Box Office).
1985
The production of black feature films (made by white
producers with black actors for black audiences) reached an all-time high. So
called B-scheme films could qualify for a government subsidy that paid out a
maximum of R70 000.00, based on the number of tickets sold for 18 cents or
less.
Many of these vernacular films were not films at all, but
bits of footage slapped together to benefit from the subsidy. There were many
subsidy scandals involving unscrupulous individuals and companies who produced
'visual diarrhea' in order to benefit financially from the scheme. The Mirror
International newsreel ceased to exist after 72 years. The SABC introduced a
fourth service, TV 4.
1986
M-Net, South Africa's first pay-tv service took to the
air.
Grey Hofmeyer's Jock of the Bushveld was a success, but
was banned in Zimbabwe due to its South African origins.
Talking Point: Why have so many major South African films
featured non South- Africans in the starring roles?
Film Resource Unit was established. Over these years what
started as a small video resource library has grown into a major distributor
and promoter of quality, homegrown South African and African film.
1987
The NuMetro Cinema Group was established. The first
gay-themed film, Quest For Love, directed by Helena Noguiera and produced by
Shan Moodley was released.
Dalene Mathee's pivotal novel, Fiela se Kind, was made
into a film. It was directed by actress Katinka Heyns, and was Heyns' first try
behind the camera. Starring Sharleen Surtie-Richards and Annie Malan, it tells
the story of a woman of color who raises a white child as her own.
Mapantsula, directed by Oliver Schmitz, was the first
anti-apartheid feature film for and about Black South Africans. It was the
winner of seven South African Film Awards but was originally banned here. It
starred Thomas Mogotlane, a talented actor, who died prematurely in 1993. At
the height of the struggle period, a carefree thug (Panic, played by Mogotlane)
is arrested and jailed along with political prisoners. He is alternatively
'befriended' and tortured by his jailors until he is forced to take a stand
that threatens his life. Film Resource Unit reports that Mapantsula has proved
very popular in the rest of Africa, and has sold 60 000 units on video.
Anant Singh and Darell Roodt released the introspective
war movie The Stick. Banned for many years, this film argued that being at war
for something you do not believe in is madness itself.
1989
A new subsidy scheme was announced by the Minister of
Broadcasting, Information and Film. It included a C-scheme for non-commercial
or art films. By December 1989 the government acknowledged that there were
insufficient funds to finance films in production.
At the beginning of the 90s there were several
co-productions: Darell Roodt's Cry, the Beloved Country, Elaine Proctor's
Friends, Jump The Gun (produced by Jeremy Nathan and directed by Britisher Les
Blair), and Shyam Bengal’s The Making of Mahatma. Approximately 944 features
were made in South Africa from 1971 to 1991, as well as nearly 998
documentaries and several hundred short films and videos.
1990
The new subsidy system determined that SA made films could
qualify for subsidy of 70% of internal box office income provided they had
earned a minimum of R200 000.00 locally. The total was limited to + R50
million. A subsidy depended on the content being certified by the Publication
Control Board. The B Scheme was phased out.
1992
Darell James Roodt directed Sarafina! (Producer was Anant
Singh), starring Leleti Khumalo, Miriam Makeba and Whoopi Goldberg. The film
tells the story of the 1976 Soweto uprisings. Shot on location in Soweto, the
film was based on the stage production by actor-musician Mbongeni Ngema. The
film grossed (earned) $8 million (Rand 19,2 million) in the United States.
Leleti Khumalo subsequently married Mbongeni Ngema, and after participating in
another Singh film, Cry The Beloved Country has not appeared again on the
silver screen
1995
M-Net introduced the first digital satellite pay-tv
service in Africa - DSTV. This service was second in the world by only six
weeks.
1996
Panic Mechanic starring slapstick comedienne Leon Schuster
became the highest grossing film South Africa had ever made (R16 million).
M-Net launched its New Directions initiative to help novice directors and
screenwriters to get real production experience. The initiative has not
deflected criticism from M-Net for consistently refusing to screen African
films, but 30 short films, and two features have been made to date by the
project. Many promising young directors - like Barry Berk (Angel; Yizo Yizo);
Jeremy Hendler (Husk); Dumisani Phakathi (Waiting for Valdez), Zola Maseko (A
Drink in the Passage) and Catherine Stewart (Transit Cafe) received their first
SA exposure via New Directions.
1997
South Africa, and particularly Cape Town, became an
increasingly popular destination for foreign film commercials.
Sithengi (isiZulu for 'we buy') the first South African
film market to attract international interest, was staged in Cape Town in
November.
1998
Paljas, directed by actor/director Katinka Heyns, was
South Africa's official entry to the Oscars, in the category of s Best Foreign
Language Film - a first for a South African feature film. Paljas is about the
relationship between a circus clown and a young boy, and the miraculous way in
which this relationship manages to heal the lives of a troubled family. Anant
Singh was the producer on Paljas, and the film marked the first collaboration
between Heyns and himself. The film is a truly South African one, shot by local
crew and cast, in an indigenous language.
The first free-to-air commercial television service, e-TV,
commenced operations. The service later became embroiled in controversy around
its supposed failure to live up to local content commissioning commitments.
(This means that local broadcasters - like e-TV, MNET and SABC, are required by
government to "buy South African" - that is, to purchase a certain
amount of the programs they show from local producers and directors, and thus
support the South African film industry. They are required to do this even
though foreign programs - especially those of the 'junk TV' sort - are often
cheaper.
When e-TV abandoned it's screening of local documentaries,
many filmmakers believed they'd been ditched. The channel has to some extent
neglected the nurturing of young South African filmmakers, preferring cheap US
shows that make economic, if not any other kind of sense. It has however
commissioned popular local soapy Backstage, a number of sitcoms, and some innovative
documentaries. E-TV has done well commercially, wrestling market away share
from the SABC and M-Net.
1999
In October, the National Film and Video Foundation (NFVF)
was launched at Sithengi, the SA International Film Market in Cape Town. While
many foreign filmmakers come to South Africa to make their films (which are not
about South Africa), films with specifically South African stories and with
South African actors and South African stories are few and far between. Those
that are made rarely sell well overseas, and often lose money. The NFVF hopes
to change all this, by facilitating the making of profitable films which
reflect South African culture and language, and exporting these all over the
world.
The NFVF aims to do this by lobbying government to change
the laws regarding film finance and film taxation; by persuading government to
make more funds available to grow the local film industry; and by working with
big South African companies (the private sector).
The NFVF also wants to grow South African support for
local films. Most South Africans know - and care - more about American movies
than they do about South African ones. Often this is because the American films
are supported by massive marketing budgets, and effective marketing campaigns, whereas
the SA marketing budgets are small, and the campaigns are often unfocussed and
unimaginative.
2002
Mr. Bones, starring Leon Schuster, and produced by Anant
Singh, became the highest grossing SA movie ever. It cost R35 million to make
(Shuster put a good deal of his own money into the film) and did very well in
SA. It was also distributed in Germany and Spain. Up to May 2002 it had earned
R32 million, second only to the US Titanic (R 39 million) and beating Lord of
the Rings I and Harry Potter.
The production of commercials, and the occasional feature
film, continued to grow, especially in the Cape.
Film Resources Unit (FRU), a Johannesburg NGO, continued
to develop alternative distribution models. Started in the eighties to
distribute socially relevant African film and video, FRU signed deals with
South Africa's most successful producer Anant Singh (Video Vision), with
broadcasters M Net and the SABC, Ster Kinekor (the release of Lumumba ) and
worked with government to encourage young business people to get involved in
film distribution.
2003
M Net puts out a movie of the month brief, commissions
eight movies, and commits to investing 11 million in the project.
Many of the older films (up to 1980) mentioned on this
site can be viewed by the public, provided they are booked in advance. They are
housed in the National Film Archive in Pretoria at 698 Church Street East.
Silent Era
The first film studio in South Africa, Killarney Film
Studios, was established in 1915 in Johannesburg.
During the 1910s and 1920s, many South African films were
made in or around Durban. These films often made use of the dramatic scenery
available in rural KwaZulu-Natal, particularly the Drakensberg region.
KwaZulu-Natal also served as the appropriate location for historical films such
as De Voortrekkers (1916) and The Symbol of Sacrifice (1918). American
filmmaker Lorimer Johnston directed several films in the area in the late 1910s
which starred American actresses Edna Flugrath and Caroline Frances Cooke.
Despite the participation of Johnson, Flugrath and Cooke, these were South
African productions featuring local actors and stories.
Sound Era
Sarie Marais, the first Afrikaans-language sound film, was
released in 1931. Subsequent sound releases such as Die Wildsboudjie (1948), a
1949 Sarie Marais remake, and Daar doer in die bosveld (1950) continued to
cater primarily to white, Afrikaans-speaking audiences.
The 3 major South African film distributors
Listed alongside each distributor are the studios they
represent:
Times Media Films: 20th Century Fox, Warner Bros., New
Line Cinema, DreamWorks SKG, DreamWorks Animation SKG…
Ster-Kinekor: PolyGram Filmed Entertainment, Focus
Features, Walt Disney Pictures, Columbia Pictures…
United International Pictures: Universal Pictures,
Paramount Pictures, Video Vision Entertainment…
The 1950s saw an increased use of South African locations
and talent by international filmmakers. British co-productions like Coast of
Skeletons (1956) and American co-productions like The Cape Town Affair (1967)
reflected the growing trend of shooting in real locations, rather than using
backlots.
National Film and Video Foundation (South Africa)
Study reveals the South African film industry has a
positive Economic Impact on the economy.
Johannesburg, 14 June 2017: The National Film and Video
Foundation (NFVF) today released findings of their second Economic Impact
Assessment study which reveals the industry’s economic contribution to the
country’s GDP over a four-year period. The study, conducted by Urban Econ in
the 2016/17 financial year, identifies and quantifies the economic impact of
the film and television industry between January 2013 to March 2017.
This study is a follow-on to the first (baseline) study
released by the NFVF in 2013. Results from this four year study reveals that,
during the 2016/17 financial year, the film industry in South Africa had a R5.4
billion contribution to the GDP, compared to the R3.5 Billion in 2013. In
total, the operations of the film industry in South Africa raised the level of
production by approximately R12.2 billion, an overall positive impact.
The total investment or expenditure made in the South
African film industry in the 2016/17 financial year resulted in the following
economic benefits:
An increase by a multiple of 4.9 in the employment
multiplier for every R1 invested. Therefore, the success of the South African
film industry is as a result of an increase in employment opportunities.
Contributed to the GDP by R 5.4 billion
A direct impact of R4.4 billion on economic production
lead to an increase of approximately R12.2 billion on total production in the
economy.
The net operational expenditure produced in the four
financial years analyzed in the study amounted to R17.5 billion.
The total number of jobs crafted amounted to 21.626
Over the last decade, the development of policies that
promote economic growth have become an integral part of the public sector. The
study further reveals key trends that play a role in the industry’s
contribution to the economy. Film productions are seen to be Gauteng, Western
Cape, and KwaZulu-Natal based with little to no income generating activity in
the Northern Cape, Free State, North West, and Mpumalanga.
Common funders are public institutions such as the
Department of Trade and Industry (dti), the NFVF as well as the Industrial
Development Corporation (IDC) but the study also identified a rise in funding
from the private sector. 32.4% of funding mainly equity financing, as well as
commissioning and pre-sales. As a result of the high risk involved in issuing
loans gap funding, at 8.5%, is the lowest form offered.
Feature films and documentaries comprise 27.3% and are the
largest segments of the industry. Animation comprises the smallest segment of
the industry at 3%. The South African film industry is among the oldest in the
world and has taken leaps to secure its place in the global market. However,
this fast growing 21st century industry remains at risk of leaving most of its
human capital behind as it remains one of the most untransformed industries in
the country.
Zama Mkosi, NFVF CEO said: “There is a strong need for
transformation in our industry. If the industry is to continue the same growth
trajectory that has been witnessed in recent years, it should focus on
transformation. Gender representation in particular remains low. The number of
black female-owned companies has remained stagnant. While this not only affects
representation in terms of the content that is produced and protagonists
therein, it stands to say that economically, PDIs are still not
well-represented within the film and television sector. Another concern is that
while we appreciate international investment, the level of skills development
and transfer from these companies is not making a real impact when it comes to training.”
The study recommends that the industry focus on
transformation, creating a skills development programme geared towards young,
black film makers. “The aim of the programme would be to shift the current
mind-sets of filmmakers from that film making is merely a form of art, to help
them start focusing on film making as business, therefore obtaining the
necessary skills required to run a business such as financial management and
identification of new business opportunities,” Aifheli Makhwanya, Head of
Policy and Research at the NFVF said. “We have found that persistent view among
upcoming filmmakers is that filmmaking is just an art is one of the biggest
hindrance to growth in this sector”.
NATIONAL FILM AND VIDEO FOUNDATION an Agency of the
Department of Arts and Culture
FAQs about the South African Film Industry
How many films are produced in South Africa each year?
About 25 films are produced for theatrical release, but
the number is a lot more as films made for television and straight to DVD are
not included…
What is South Africa’s highest grossing film?
Schuks Tshabalala's Survival Guide to South Africa at R38
million…
What is the market share of South African films?
11% as at March 2014…
How many cinema screens are there in South Africa?
+- 800 screens in more than 70 complexes…
How much does the film industry contribute to the South
African economy?
R3.5 billion according to the NFVF 2012 Economic Baseline
Study…
What is the size of the film industry?
Estimated Size…
Pre-production - 3%...
Production - 89%...
Post-production - 3%...
Distribution - 5%...
Total Market Size R 1 255 560 830…
The Production stage of the SAFI’s value chain has the
highest expenditure, accounting for roughly 89% of the entire industry…
How many jobs are created by the film industry?
25 175 full time equivalent jobs…
What is the film industry Multiplier Effect?
2.89…
Sources,
References & Credits: Google, Wikipedia, Wikihow, Pinterest, IMDB, Linked
In, Indie Wire, Film Making Stuff, Hiive, Film Daily, New York Film Academy, The
Balance, The Numbers, Film Maker, TV Guide Magazine, Media Match, Quora, Creative
Skill Set, Investopedia, Variety, No Film School, Daily Variety, The Film
Agency, Best Sample Resume, How Stuff Works, Career Trend, Producer's Code of
Credits, Producers Guild of America, Film Connection, Entertainment Careers, Adhere
Creative, In Deed, Glass Door, Pay Scale, Merriam-Webster, Job Monkey, Studio
Binder, The Collective, Production Hub, The Producer's Business Handbook by
John J. Lee Jr., Andrew Grant, Thought Company, National Film and Video
Foundation South Africa, "Table 8: Cinema Infrastructure – Capacity".
UNESCO Institute for Statistics, "A History of the South African Film
Industry timeline 1895-2003", National Film and Video Foundation (South
Africa)…
http://nfvf.co.za/home/index.php?ipkArticleID=513,
NATIONAL FILM AND VIDEO FOUNDATION an Agency of the Department of Arts and
Culture, South African History Organization, http://www.sahistory.org.za/topic/history-south-african-film-industry-timeline-1895-2003
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