By Bernard Dayo
Friday June 10, 2022
Photo Credit: Ahmed Farah
Ayaanle is the feature debut from Somalian director Ahmed Farah.
With terrorism plaguing countries in the Horn of Africa,
Ahmed Farah’s terrorist-themed movie, Ayaanle, takes a critical look beyond the
surface, attempting to challenge a stereotype that also implicates Western
media.
In Nairobi, a young Somalian man with dreams of becoming a
famous actor arrives at a crossroads: help the police infiltrate a terrorist
group by acting as a member or fight for movie roles that don’t portray him as
such. This is the scenario at play on Ayaanle, the feature debut from Somalian
director Ahmed Farah.The movie comes with a certain self-awareness. The mocking
of international media and its troping of Somalians as terrorists is present.
Western reporters, in their pursuit for convenient labelling, are scammed by
locals impersonating pirates and terrorists.
Farah makes sly observations of this cottage industry.
Barkhad Abdirahman, who plays the titular character, joins forces with Farah to
shine a light into his own life as an actor. Starring in 2013’s Captain
Phillips, where he plays a Somalian pirate, he hasn’t been afforded the room to
step into other roles of interest.
Coming from making documentaries (The Last Hijack) in 2014,
43-year-old Farah is applying his creative impulses towards feature-length
projects. Last month, Ayaanle premiered in the U.S. at the New York African
Film Festival. Come October, it will screen at the BFI London Film Festival.
Next month, the film is set for a wide release in Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda,
Zambia, South Africa, Djibouti and Kenya.
Speaking from this year’s Cannes Film Festival, which
wrapped up last month, Farah tells OkayAfrica about making Ayaanle despite
challenges and his vision as a filmmaker from Somalia.
How did the
inspiration for Ayaanle come about?
I was with friends from Czech Republic who were shooting a
documentary about Somali pirates. We have both been following each other’s
works and on this set, the man who they found as the pirate was sharing his
life story to them. As I listened to him, I immediately suspected that what he
was saying was made up. He’s Kenyan-Somalian and even though he did his
research, it was still a fabrication. He wasn’t a real pirate. During a break,
I approached him to have my suspicions confirmed. Turned out I was right. By
his own admission, he asked that I [don't] ruin things for him or spoil his
gig.
I realized that this was an actor. I did some research and
found out that he’s among a group of make-believe actors who have been featured
as pirates in international press like the New York Times. This is a
documentary about someone posing as who they are not just to earn some money.
So this was how the inspiration for Ayaanle came about, from fake pirates and
terrorists.
Ayaanle was shot in
Nairobi, Kenya. How challenging was it to shoot?
First, it’s the same problem plaguing African filmmaking,
the lack of support from the government. You are required to do everything
yourself in making your film without assistance. We struggled to get access to
government institutions and places. There was also a challenge in gaining
government permits. It was really tough trying to get guns and you can’t use
fake guns. It took weeks and months to get the access and permits we needed.
Another thing we faced was trying to shoot scenes in main streets and city
centers because filming is restricted. What we were left with were the slums,
and crowd management with which was tasking.
Ayaanle premiered at
the New York African Film Festival last month. Are there plans for theatrical
releases in Kenya and Somalia?
Actually we were still editing the film just before it was
shown at NYAFF. And there are plans to release the film in Kenya and Somali
because I’m particularly interested in what Africans think about the story we
tell. Because, at the end of the day, the people you would like to give you
credit are Africans.
Cinema in Somalia has
suffered decades of being in the dark, hijacked by terrorism which has posed
security challenges. How do you think Ayaanle will revitalize cinema culture in
the country?
We are aware of the security issues in Somalia and all the
mayhem. And even though we shot the film in Kenya, we had the trailer premiere
in Somalia and people came around, including government officials and the
media. They saw that we could tell local stories with an international level of
production, stories that otherwise won’t be told by Western media.
Take for example movies like Captain Phillips and Black Hawk
Down, which were adapted from books written by white men. Despite having
Somalian characters, it is not a Somalian story. It’s all shown through a
Western lens.
We need to tell our own stories and to be able to do that,
we need access and funding. We need people to be supportive and understand the
value of storytelling. I think Ayaanle is breaking the barrier and it’s proving
that we too can deliver the same quality with Hollywood movies. Also, cinema is
a business, and investors and business people will see that there’s money to be
made and invest in our industry.
What do you think are
the pressing concerns for Somalian filmmaking or the Somalian film industry?
We have a lot to do and learn ourselves. Our government
comes from a failed state and has been struggling with building the system. If
you look at any successful film industry, the government has a hand involved,
the support is there. What we are hoping is that things become stable and the
government understands the value of storytelling. Movies have the power to
change the mindset of the youths, with employment and distract them from
participating in certain vices.
I think movies will help people see a different side of
Somalia, even for the Somalians themselves and the ones in the diaspora, who
barely know what’s happening in the country. We need to talk a lot more and
make ourselves heard, with the government and entrepreneurs coming together to build
cinema infrastructure for the country.
What did you hope to
achieve in handling the portrayal of terrorism and radicalization?
Ayaanle is story about a young Somalian actor who has always
been cast as a terrorist or a pirate, so he’s struggling to find a balance to
get different roles other than the ones he is always portrayed in. He’s also
not making enough money as an actor. I wanted the film to talk about what
international media gets wrong about terrorism, to ask the question of how much
is true in their depictions.
For me, it’s also about drawing attention to the desperate
actors who are tell fake stories as terrorists and pirates in movies. I focused
on the theme of terrorism because it affects the youth in Somalia. Let’s say
you have been arrested for something and the first thing the police does is
label you as a terrorist. It also addresses police corruption and complicity.
When you go for casting or auditions, the roles about terrorism are reserved
for Somalians, we aren’t portrayed as doctors or business persons. Ayaanle is
targeting how Somalians are typecast as terrorists.
Talking about the
cast, Barkhad Abdirahman is famous for playing a member of a pirate crew role
in the Hollywood film Captain Phillips. Did you have Abdirahman in your mind
when you were thinking about a male lead for Ayaanle or did his casting come
much later?
Incidentally, Barkhad was in Kenya as part of the cast for
Watu Wote,which was nominated for an Oscar. The film was about a bus being
attacked by Al-Shabaab, a unique story and I was on the set. That was where I
met Barkhad for the first time. He was telling me how he couldn’t get roles
other than terrorist and that was when I saw him playing an actor in my film.
It felt convenient.
Throughout the story of Ayaanle, there’s nothing that I made
up. It is based on real stories. Barkhad has experience and isn’t a newcomer.
He was in the American series Fargo and Stray. As my first film, I didn’t want
to take the risk of casting someone new. Right away, I saw him playing the role
of Ayaanle.
As a a Somalian
filmmaker, do you think there are expectations for you to make films that talk
about terrorism?
I have the freedom to do whatever I want because I’m not
dependent on anyone’s funding, it’s a choice I made a long time ago. If I want
to do things my way and I need to find my funds my way. I don’t have the
pressure of fulfilling the expectations of others. I’m doing my things the way
I see them fit. This is why I prefer to do low-budget movies for which I’m in
full control and then progress from there. In the future, I would like to do
comedy, horror, thrillers, love stories, whatever comes to mind as long as it
is interesting for people to watch. My focus is to tell Somalian stories and
make it universal.