The festival, produced by the non-profit BlackStar Projects, showcases the work of film-makers of colour, earning it the nickname, the “Black Sundance” by Ebony Magazine. Last year, more than 15,000 viewers attended the BlackStar film festival in person and online. Its emphasis on genre-defying films, said Khader, and solidarity among Black, brown and Indigenous people sets it apart from similar festivals
THE voice of the writer Toni Cade Bambara overlays a montage of archival film and photographs of Black people at school and work in a new feature documentary about her life. “The Reconstruction era offers a window into the 1930s,” Bambara says in the film. “There is the same drive for land, for the vote, for labour rights, education. The same need for self-help enterprises, for group cooperation.”
So begins TCB – The Toni Cade Bambara School of Organising, the biographical film about the Black author, documentarian and social activist whose work on Black liberation and feminism helped inspire 20th-century social justice movements. The documentary by the filmmaker Louis Massiah is a composite of her words and stories from her friends, including Toni Morrison.
A screening of TCB – The Toni Cade Bambara School of Organising will kick off the 14th annual BlackStar Film Festival, running from 31 July to 3 August in various locations around Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and online. Ranging from shorts to features, the more than 90 films in this year’s program are “leaning into the moment”, said the festival director, Nehad Khader, by highlighting films about legacy and the power of community building, as well as labour and economics.
BlackStar Film Festival 2024. Photograph: Daniel Jackson/BlackStar Film Festival

