REGGAE MOVIE
FESTIVAL FOR ROTOTOM REGGAE SUNSPLASH 2010
AN
added attraction has been introduced to the 2010 Rototom Reggae Sunsplash to be
held for the first time in
As
a booster, the organisers of the major summer reggae festival in
After
16 years, this renowned brand of musicians, artistes and musical aficionados,
usually assembled in
Our
Reggae Boyz (football team), is yet to enjoy such crowning glory, but no reggae
festival, can boast authenticity without the Jamaican musical stalwarts, even
though Europe is now producing its own sensations in the genre.
This
is a fact the organisers of the Rototom Reggae Sunsplash who have been chased
out of Italy by the authorities, have always recognised and have billed as they
have always done, some of reggae’s finest ambassadors from yard.
The
line-up for the 17-staging which is yet to be completed, so far include Anthony
B, Big Youth, Bob Andy, Marcia Griffiths, Fantan Mojah, Glen Washington, Romaine
Virgo, Alpha Blondy, Aswad, Alborosie, and many more to be added.
And,
as if for greater damage control because of the relocation, the Best of the
Jamaica Reggae Film Festival has now been added.
Since
1972 when
In 2008 these ‘reggae
films’ were gathered together in one place for the first ever Reggae Film
Festival, held in New Kingston in February as part of Reggae Month.
The event was a collaboration between Jamaican filmmaker and film festival
organiser Barbara Blake Hannah and British film archivist Peter Gittins of Reggae Films UK, with support from private sector
sponsors and the Jamaican Ministry of Culture.
Sixteen
feature and documentary films from
In
2009 a smaller programme premiered films from the
This year, the Reggae
Film Festival saw the screenings of 22 films, a special daytime Children’s
Programme and a Make-a-Film-in-24-Hours competition.
“Not only have
filmmakers from all over the globe entered their films and travelled to Jamaica
to present them and win awards, but the event has come to the notice of global
reggae fans, international media and cultural organisations, several of which
have established links for future collaboration,” she added
Among
the films to be shown are the Argentinian feature film Roots Time, award
winning Japanese documentary Ruffn Tuff – Founders of the Immortal Riddim, a German
documentary on Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry, the animated film Kina Sky and Not
To Me, the first feature film by noted Jamaican film–maker Ras Kassa.
“The
directors of the