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Past event
27.4 Mon
2026
From 6:30 PM
To 10:00 PM

Short Heritage Films


The Organizers

ALFILM Festival

Rare Sudanese short films from the 1970s and 1980s, these works engage with labour, exile, landscape, transit, and everyday life through concise and formally distinctive cinematic structures. Attentive to marginal spaces, minor gestures, and slow historical durations, they offer a way of seeing shaped as much by political experience as by a precise and searching relation to image, sound, and rhythm.

Long description

This programme gathers a selection of rare Sudanese short films made in the 1970s and 1980s, each one still charged with the power to confront the present and to evoke an aesthetic language that remains fully contemporary.

We wish to frame the programme as a space of disclosure: a way of revealing what endured at the margins, what lay buried in the detail, and what Sudanese cinema has preserved as traces resistant to erasure. From Suakin in The Dislocation of Amber to exile and inner fragmentation in Tigers Are Better Looking; from the harsh circularity of labour, estrangement, and the burdens of daily life in A Camel to the economies of transit and waiting in The Station; and on to images of life in places that once imagined liberation, while persisting in the slow work of historical change in It Still Rotates - the programme gradually takes shape as a sensory and political map of images that look at the world from its edges, and through its less visible fractures.

These films may be linked by a broadly political and militant frame, and by a marked class consciousness. Yet they are equally bound by a shared insistence on inventing a cinematic language that understands condensation as density, the fragment as structure, and the everyday as a site of deep historical inscription. They resist grand narratives by attending instead to stone, body, movement, labour, passage, silence, and rhythm. In doing so, they make of short form a spacious terrain for aesthetic reflection and the production of counter-knowledge, where personal experience intersects with social structure, the local with the regional, and the poetic with the documentary.

In this sense, the programme proposes a reading of what has been left dormant in files and collections, approaching the outmoded as a contemporary practice: a return to foundational cinematic moments, far removed from nostalgia, reverence, or iconisation, in order to reactivate them within the questions of our own time. In their formal boldness and aesthetic singularity, these films return from the past not as relics, but as works that continue their lives in the present-shaping an alternative visual memory while keeping open the question of what cinema can preserve, and what it can, at the same time, remake and bring into being.

Panel

Post-screening, the programme opens onto a conversation about the conditions under which Sudanese film history is preserved, circulated, and re-encountered today. Focusing on archival exchange practices between international institutions and Sudanese community-based initiatives and associations, the panel considers the unequal structures, practical negotiations, and forms of custodianship that shape access to cinematic material. At a moment marked by dispersal, vulnerability, and renewed urgency, it asks what it means to work with Sudanese film heritage in the present, and how archival responsibility might be rethought across institutions, communities, and contexts.

6:30 PM

Short Heritage Films 89’

8:30 PM

Panel 90’


About Organizer

ALFILM Festival Berlin is organized since 2009 by the non-profit association Zentrum für arabische Filmkunst und Kultur e.V. (formerly Freunde der arabischen Kinemathek, Berlin e.V.) It is the largest platform for the promotion of the diverse Arab cinematography in Germany. ALFILM takes place in Berlin in cinema Arsenal and City Kino Wedding, as well as other venues. It is a founding member of Festiwelt e.V., the independent network of Berlin film festivals.ALFILM is organized and run by a team of freelancers and volunteers, currently led by Pascale Fakhry (Executive Director) and Iskandar Abdalla (Artistic Director).The aim of ALFILM is to highlight films from the Arab world and its diaspora that have a high artistic value and present challenging perspectives on contemporary cultural, social and political issues. With its two main pillars ALFILM SELECTION, ALFILM SPOTLIGHT, the festival offers a lively platform for critical discourse, intercultural exchange, engagement with other cultures and future synergies and cooperations.Discussions with filmmakers and experts take up socially and artistically relevant topics while offering new and stimulating views on the coexistence of cultures, diversity, and the portrayal and representation of minorities in mainstream society. Panel discussions on current themes, film talks and a specials complete the programme.

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