Akosua Adoma Owusu Trailers
King of Sanwi TrailerWhite Afro TrailerPelourinho, They Don’t Really Care About Us Trailer
Akosua Adoma Owusu (b. 1984) is a Ghanaian-American filmmaker, producer, and cinematographer whose films address the collision of identities. Interpreting the notion of "double consciousness," coined by sociologist and civil rights activist W. E. B. Du Bois to define the experience of black Americans negotiating selfhood in the face of discrimination and cultural dislocation, Owusu aims to create a third cinematic space or consciousness. In her works, feminism, queerness, and African identities interact in African, white American, and black American cultural environments.
Named by Indiewire as one of 6 pre-eminent Avant-Garde Female Filmmakers Who Redefined Cinema, she was a featured artist of the 56th Robert Flaherty Film Seminar programmed by renowned critic and film curator Dennis Lim. Owusu has exhibited worldwide including at the Berlinale, Rotterdam, Locarno, Toronto, New Directors/New Films (New York), and the BFI London Film Festival. She has won numerous fellowships and grants including from the Guggenheim Foundation, Westridge Foundation, Knight Foundation, Creative Capital, MacDowell Colony, Camargo Foundation and most recently from the Residency Program of the Goethe-Institut Salvador-Bahia. Currently, she divides her time between Ghana and New York, where she works as an Assistant Professor at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn.
Akosua Adoma Owusu is represented by Andrew Farber at Farber Law LLC.
Most Popular Akosua Adoma Owusu Trailers
Total trailers found: 17
05 September 2013
This short by Akosua Adoma Owusu offers a spellbinding, semi-autobiographical interpretation of a traditional Ghanaian folktale in which the contemporary collides with the mythological in both content and form.
17 September 2020
A companion piece to Pelourinho: They Don’t Really Care About Us (NYFF57), King of Sanwi continues Akosua Adoma Owusu’s exploration of Michael Jackson as a global pop icon.
11 November 2010
A portrait of a dilapidated Olympic-sized pool in Accra, Ghana.
19 February 2009
Me Broni Ba is a lyrical portrait of hair salons in Kumasi, Ghana. The tangled legacy of European colonialism in Africa is evoked through images of women practicing hair braiding on discarded white baby dolls from the West.
19 January 2006
A small girl's nightmare. Untitled No.1 is part of Mike Plante's Lunchfilm series of commissioned shorts (made for the cost of a lunch between Plante and filmmaker Nina Menkes).
07 August 2019
White Afro employs an archival instructional video on how to offer curly perms or body waving services to their white clientele, ostensibly for financial gain.
26 October 2005
Part documentary, part fiction, Ajube Kete is positioned as a day in the life of a West African girl.
31 December 2008
Michael Jordan learns how to swim.
29 March 2012
A unique exploration of fashion and hairstyles in the 1970s using found footage as the subject matter.
07 April 2014
Bus Nut rearticulates the 1955 Montgomery Bus Boycott, a political and social protest against U.S. racial segregation on the public transit system of Montgomery, Alabama, and its relationship to an educational video on school-bus safety.
19 September 2007
Intermittent Delight juxtaposes close-ups of batik textiles, fashion and design from the 1950s and 1960s, images of men weaving and women sewing in Ghana, and fragments of a Westinghouse 1960s commercial- aimed to instruct women on the how-to of refrigerator decoration.
01 September 2006
Beautiful Chrissy plays with Miss Mary Mack.
16 February 2016
This epistolary short film invites us into the unsettling life of a young Ghanaian man struggling to reconcile his love for his mother with his love for same-sex desire.
18 January 2014
16th July 1969: America prepares to launch Apollo 11. Thousands of kilometers away, a ragtag group of Zambian exiles is trying to beat America to the Moon.
08 February 2018
This film follows Kamara, a Nigerian woman, on her journey to self-realization. When Tracy, an artise
23 January 2019
The starting point for this colourful film is a letter from human rights activist W.E.B. Du Bois to the American embassy in Brazil.
25 January 2018
Mahogany Too takes the 1975 cult classic Mahogany – a fashion-infused romantic drama – as its base.