Already as a child, Holtedahl became fascinated by people and objects from different life worlds. As a young adult she went to Paris in 1964 and watched screenings of ethnographical films in the Musée de l’Homme for the first time. There she also met Jean Rouch, who fueled her interest in Africa, film, and ethnology. Early on, she became aware of the difficulty of conveying impressions of Africa. In her first film, NIGER-NORGE (1975), she addresses the living conditions of women in a village in eastern Nigeria, which she contrasts with corresponding scenes shot in Tromsø. In this way, she provides a provocative and tongue-in-cheek glimpse of what Westerners consider normal as a way of overcoming stereotypes. The potential and challenge of adequately translating different life worlds through film continues to occupy the director up to this day. In her works, Holtedahl always has Western audiences in mind – their longings and their prejudices. Her main goals are to enable them to empathize with the protagonists and to create space for identification. While sensory ethnographic films (freiburger film forum 2015) … read more
Lisbet Holtedahl
Fri, 31-May-19 10:00 AM
Anthropological filmmaking: Lessons learned As young novice in Anthropology in the field, I made drawings of people and asked children to do the same thing; I also took pictures and … read more
The Château
Lisbeth Holtedahl
Norway 2018 | 113 min | engl. subtitled
Norway 2018 | 113 min | engl. subtitled
Thu, 30-May-19 07:30 PM
A portrait of one of the richest Cameroonian industrialists Al Hajji Mohamadou Ousmanou Abbo. Filmed over a period of more than ten years. The red thread of the story is … read more
Wives
Lisbeth Holtedahl
Norway 2018 | 85 min | engl. subtitled
Norway 2018 | 85 min | engl. subtitled
Thu, 30-May-19 01:30 PM
Fri, 31-May-19 05:30 PM
Alhajji Ibrahim Gonji is an Islamic scholar. For 46 years, he has served as judge at the Sultanate of Ngaoundéré in Northern Cameroon. The film follows Alhajji during the last years of his life, focussing on the relationships in a polygamous family, seen from the perspective of the wives and their husband. The film (shot in years 1997-2001 and edited only now) presents a way of life that is typical of the societies and cultures of Borno and Adamaoua provinces (Nigeria and Cameroon) where people living far away from the capital centers, struggle to adapt to modern education, strong marginalization and increasing poverty. In recent years, the region has been under constant threat of the Boko Haram insurgency.