Human Rights Arts & Film Festival announces highlights from its upcoming festival

The 9th Human Rights Arts & Film Festival (HRAFF) has announced a selection of highlights from its 2016 program, which offers an entertaining and innovative showcase of events that delve into diverse and powerful human stories. These are just a few sneak peaks from the creative program of film, arts, music and forums which opens on 5 May in Melbourne.

“This year we have had the choice of so many excellent films”, said Program Director Malcolm Blaylock. “The Opening Night film will be a special premiere and is set to be one of the most important Australian documentaries of 2016 – more details to be unveiled in the coming weeks. The program is bound to challenge your thinking on contemporary issues: the films are passionate, thoughtful and inspirational; the arts are captivating and immersive; and the forums will throw fresh light on critical global and local issues. This will be another stellar year for HRAFF, exploring the complexities of many social justice issues that confront us today.”

Music, one of the most important forms of communication in Mali, disappeared overnight in 2012. Rather than lay down their instruments, Mali’s musicians fought back. They Will Have To Kill Us First: Malian Music in Exile, is a documentary which follows various musicians in Mali – in the wake of a jihadist takeover and subsequent banning of music in the region. The film features one of the world’s most exciting new bands, Songhoy Blues; created when four budding musicians from different corners of Mali fled to exile in Bamako.

Straight from Sundance 2016 comes the winner of U.S documentary Special Jury Award: The Bad Kids. Set on a remote patch of the Majave Desert sits an anomaly: a high school where educators, lead by principal Vonda Viland believe empathy, life skills, and constancy of a caring adult are the tools that will give at-risk students command of their fate. This is a touching and rich documentary that uses intimate verité camerawork and poetic, stylized sequences to create an immersive, emotional experience that gives way to not just information, but also insight about America’s most pressing education problem: poverty.

Taking out two awards at the Sundance Film Festival, including Best Screenplay, the tense psychological thriller Stanford Prison Experiment makes its Melbourne Premiere at HRAFF. Featuring an extraordinary cast of rising young actors including Ezra Miller and Thomas Mann with Billy Crudup in the starring role. In 1971, Stanford University professor Dr. Philip Zimbardo conducted an experiment in a simulated jail to examine the source of abusive behavior in the prison system. The experiment’s results astonished the world, revealing the dark side of power and the effects of imprisonment in this notorious true story.

Another highlight takes us into the world of fashion. The True Cost is a story about clothing: the clothing we wear, the people who make it, and the impact the industry is having on our world. This groundbreaking documentary pulls back the curtain on the untold story and asks us to consider: who really pays the price for our clothing? Filmed in countries all over the world, from the brightest runways to the darkest slums, featuring interviews with the world’s leading influencers, including Stella McCartney, Livia Firth and Vandana Shiva.

As part of its arts program, and for the first time ever, the festival sets foot in Footscray for HRAFF GOES WEST, an afternoon of entertainment and discussion, showcasing the stories of our newest Australians and celebrating their creative and cultural contribution. The event kicks off with a rhythmic, cross-cultural performance by the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre’s Music Group, followed by a selection of short films from the Festival’s 2016 line-up and a panel discussion.

This year, due to the high-calibre of international shorts available and popularity of HRAFF’s short film offerings, the festival is expanding its line-up to include an additional International Shorts session. There will be four shorts sessions across the Melbourne leg in total, including the very popular Australian Shorts session. As part of the line-up HRAFF has secured all five nominees for Best Live Action Short Film at the 2016 Oscars, which include: Ave Maria, Day One, Everything Will Be Okay, Shok and Stutterer.

For its second year, HRAFF will present the highly successful Breakfast Sessions – four forums over two weekends in Melbourne that will discuss topics that are at the forefront of current human rights debates. Bringing fresh perspectives and new insights, panels have been assembled to bring a variety of opinions, knowledge and expertise. There will also be forums in Sydney and Darwin, with the schedule to be confirmed in the coming weeks. Breakfast Sessions in Melbourne will be accompanied by tea, coffee and a muffin. These events are ticketed and bookings are essential.

The national tour kicks off in Melbourne on 5 May, followed by Sydney, Brisbane, Canberra, Perth, Alice Springs and Darwin.

The full program will be announced in early April.

For more information or to subscribe to the e-news visit www.hraff.org.au

———-

This content has recently been ported from its original home on The Iris and may have formatting errors – images may not be showing up, or duplicated, and galleries may not be working. We are slowly fixing these issue. If you spot any major malfunctions making it impossible to read the content, however, please let us know at editor AT theaureview.com.