One World Media Award prize to Izulu Lami

Madoda Ncayiyana’s Izulu Lami (My Secret Sky) has won its seventh international prize: a One World Media Drama Award in the UK. Produced by Durban’s Vuleka Productions and Johannesburg’s Dv8, Izulu Lami was one of three films shortlisted and was awarded the Drama Award’s 2nd Prize by a jury chaired by Head of Warp Films-Europe, Peter Carlton, with jury members including actress Greta Scacchi, BBC Music & Events head Jan Younghusband and playwright Lydia Adetunji.

This was the jury’s citation in praise of Izulu Lami: “Almost a fairytale, we were immediately charmed by the engaging performances of a luminous young cast. The story managed to reveal the harsh realities of street life in the city without falling into hopelessness. Instead of making a drama of their predicament it gave dignity and reality to these children's lives by allowing the drama to unfold between them as characters.”

In its comments on the three films it judged, the jury noted: “We were struck overall by the extremely high quality of the films shortlisted. We would like to acknowledge the extraordinary achievements these films represent simply to get made in very difficult environments and their value in bearing witness to lives often unseen by the rest of the world.” First Prize went to Mario Bechis’s Birdwatchers, distributed by Celluloid Dreams.

The One World Media prize goes to outstanding feature films and TV dramas that depict the developing world in a compelling and imaginative way. It is open to films shown theatrically in the UK or on British television. Izulu Lami has screened in the official selection of several UK film festivals and was described by the UK’s Guardian as “South Africa’s Slumdog Millionaire”. Izulu Lami features a cast of mainly young children from townships and informal settlements who had never acted professionally before being discovered by director Ncayiyana. The film was shot entirely in Durban and rural KwaZulu-Natal, with a cast and crew largely from Durban.

The One World Media Drama Award is Izulu Lami’s seventh international award. The film won the Cannes Pan-African Film Festival’s prestigious Dikalo Award for Best Feature Film, the Best Debut Film prize at India’s International Film Festival of Kerala, the Audience Award for Best Film at the Verona International African Film Festival in Italy and the Signis Award for Best Film at the Zanzibar International Film Festival. It won the Audience Award for Best Film at Spain’s Tarifa International African Film Festival and child star Sobahle Mkhabase won Best Actress, competing against adult actors, for her performance at the age of 10.

Izulu Lami has won three South African Film and Television Awards. The SAFTA for Best Supporting Actor in a Feature Film went to Tshepang Mohlomi, who was 14 years old when he played a street urchin named Chili-Bite in Izulu Lami. Competing against adult actors, he not only won but impressed the audience of the live national television broadcast with his confident acceptance speech. Izulu Lami also won SAFTAs for Best Production Designer and Best Costume Design in a Feature Film.

Izulu Lami has received excellent critical reviews. Top film critic Barry Ronge called it “an extraordinary work of great power” in the Sunday Times, writing that “Madoda Ncayiyana gives us a vision of the lives of these children that I cannot recall seeing in any other South African-made film… on a tiny budget, the director and his crew have made a well-styled film, structured and detailed.” Award-winning author and film critic Don Mattera called Izulu Lami a film that “gives one confidence and a sense of tangible hope for the future of film production in South Africa”.

Izulu Lami is written by Julie Frederikse and director Ncayiyana, produced by Jeremy Nathan of Dv8 Films, and co-produced by Frederikse of Vuleka Productions. Izulu Lami is supported by the National Film and Video Foundation (NFVF), the SABC, Ster-Kinekor Distribution, the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) Rebate, and the French film fund, Fonds Images Afrique. The eThekwini Municipality supported the shooting of the film in Durban’s KwaMashu and Inanda townships.

During its theatrical release in 2009 Izulu Lami was embraced by cinema-goers throughout South Africa, staying on circuit for three months. Izulu Lami is available on DVD from Ster Kinekor Entertainment, for purchase in leading retail stores nationally and online from www.kalahari.net, as well as for rental.

Director Madoda Ncayiyana is currently developing his new film, Mobile Muti, produced by Julie Frederikse of Vuleka Productions and co-written by Frederikse and Ncayiyana. The film is one of the twelve projects selected for Durban Film Mart, part of the upcoming 2010 Durban International Film Festival. Mobile Muti will star the two award-winning child actors from Izulu Lami, Tshepang Mohlomi and Sobahle Mkhabase.