The African Film Library is an M-Net initiative showcasing the best of the African
film industry – making the movies easily accessible for movie aficionados around
the world.
The African film industry is one of the oldest – with its roots in Ain el Ghezel
(The Girl of Carthage), which was produced in Tunisia by Chemama Chikly in 1924.
M-Net has spent the last three years negotiating the rights to almost 600 works
in English, French, Arabic and Portuguese and digitally remastering them.
The library forms an important archive of the continent’s cultural cinematic heritage,
and also, for the first time, makes the African artists’ works easily accessible
by a wide viewership around the globe – creating a new audience for existing and
emerging filmmakers.
The library consists of award-winning works from more than 80 producers including
Senegalese Ousmane Sembene and Djibril Mambety, Yousef Chahine from Egypt and Haile
Gerima from Ethiopia.