"When you don't work together you can't emerge as a force. It becomes what some call a "lonely struggle" and individual self-destruction."
"I think once you have films in certain festivals you begin to have name recognition, and there are possibilities."
Source: Source: blogs.indiewire.com
About the author
Haile Gerima
Filmmaker
Haile Gerima is an Ethiopian-American filmmaker known for his impactful works like 'Sankofa,' which explore themes of identity and struggle.
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More quotes by Haile Gerima
"I am not interested only in telling a story, but I want to tell it my way. I don't want my accent, my temperament, my narrative style to be compromised to fit into a mold of the Hollywood type."
"There are filmmakers like me in different parts of the world that have a story they want to tell, and it's a story that comes out of a certain historical reality within their own life. Then you get committed all the way and however long it takes, stay very committed."
"Most young people make films to be accepted, to be discovered, when in fact that was the last idea with the group I went to film school with. To be discovered was not our intention. Our intention was to tell our story our way, and make our own mistakes and learn from film to film."
"The true story is that black people need to tell their history. Very few films are made by black people about slavery. That itself is a crime because slavery is a very important historical event that has held our people hostage. Forget white people's role in it. In the end what's important is black people remain and live with the scars and psychological issues."
"The system knows how to cherry pick black people. It's like affirmative action - once a year, one is recognized. But what has to occur is self-emergence so if they ignore you, you don't have to disappear."