Cinema for dev’t: Coming epilepsy doc wins empathy |
Monday, 15 April 2013 00:32 |
Film making goes beyond entertainment. Apart from the traditional media (radio, television and newspapers), cinema is also an unarguably strong medium for development. This has been noticeable in the domain of health. There have been scores of film projects in Africa geared at attracting the attention of either public health donor organizations or seeking lasting solutions to some of the most undesirable diseases. Two of the film makers who have taken interest in this rather humanitarian approach of the art are Bamenda-based Takong Delvis and Limbe-based Enah Johnscott. Touched by devastating effects of epilepsy, Takong and Johnscott set on a filming adventure to discover the lives of patients. People with epilepsy in Cameroon are seen as outcast. People believe that epilepsy is caused by wictches and wizards. So these people are highly stigmatized in their varioue communities. What can we do ? This question has been a guiding tool for the young and daring film makers who have since September 2012 been on the move, talking to victims and knowing exactly what they face as they deal with their condition. Fainting Fit points out the challenges faced by victims of epilepsy which includes deformities, the attribution of the disease to witchcraft, poverty, neglect and most especially stigmatization.
If the topic attracts attention, the style employed in the film makes it more emotion. By letting the victims and the people directly or indirectly involved talk, the film makers make their subject really appealing to human conscience. Perhaps the slow motion and soul-searching sound track gives the documentary an extraordinarily serious tone – meaning there is something in the air which must be addressed and address real quick.
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Last Updated on Saturday, 20 April 2013 11:48 |