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- After studying medicine in France, David comes back to his native Gabon to treat his compatriots. He meets Oyana, his former sweetheart, and both laugh at the old-fashioned traditions. The young physician is sent to the bush where he is to vaccinate the somewhat reluctant population. He meets Rispal, a white man who tells him there are things he ignores in his own country where legends, witches and superstitions abound. Most amazing thing, this embittered man has a wife, Isabelle, a beautiful woman who wanders through the bush.
- Oliwina, a journalist returns to the town of Agouwé in her native Gabon, where she left for 15 years due to a traumatic event, to investigate the disappearance of her younger brother Pao.
- When her father, a former judge, is accused of the rape and murder of a young girl, a high-flying female lawyer must fight to prove his innocence.
- "I come from a people, the Fang, where the dead never leave the living. But since we have become Christians, we are no longer able to hear them." Lost between the here-and-now and the beyond, Natyvel Pontalier's spiritual quest in Gabon takes her back to her family's roots.
- Cameroonian filmmaker Bassek ba Kobhio provides a fascinating revisionist perspective on Albert Schweitzer, Noble Peace Prize winner and secular saint of the colonial era. Like FRANTZ FANON: BLACK SKIN, WHITE MASK, this film begins to rewrite the history of colonialism from the point of view of the colonized. LE GRAND BLANC DE LAMBARÉNÉ is not, however, a facile exercise in iconoclasm but rather a deeply-felt lament for a missed opportunity, for a cross-cultural encounter between Africa and Europe which never happened. The film reveals that the ultimate tragedy of colonialism may have been its refusal to see and value the colonized as autonomous, creative human beings. The film's epigraph, ironically, is a famous remark by Schweitzer himself: "All we can do is allow others to discover us, as we discover them."
- Mougler and his friends slip into a life of petty crime in Libreville, Gabon. When they take their chances in robbing a lottery kiosk, things turn from lighthearted to tragic.
- While secretly recording the quarrel of a couple, a priest makes a terrible discovery.
- Edji 07, is a cyber activist who denounces corrupted African politicians. One day he receives a message about embezzlement. He publishes the information and gets kidnapped.
- Once upon a time there was a queen who decided to bring back a sacred necklace that had belonged to one of her ancestors. This necklace, she thinks, will restore balance and prosperity to her people.
- An inquisitive young boy answers questions about everyday inventions and the natural world.
- Follows in an unconventional way the journey of 'Ish', a former Miami based rapper, who traveled to Africa to visit family. Little did he know that Libreville (Gabon) would be the place where the project of his dreams would fall on his laps. Against all expectations the alchemy born between him and 2 local beat-makers would lead to the making of a potential first album. Written and directed by Marc A. Tchicot and Franck A. Onouviet, the film captures glimpse of great encounters and musical moments between people from opposite backgrounds driven by the same passion: music. 'The Rhythm of my life' belongs to the new generation of short films, which combine fiction and documentary style. Deeply grounded in the line of non-formatted and guerrilla style independent projects, The Rhythm of my life set a different direction for film-making in Gabon and Africa.
- A young man and woman learn that it is their destiny to save the city of Libreville from evil forces.
- Magloire and Florence got married traditionally, with the approval of their families. Three years later, they face a serious crisis in their couple and want to divorce. But it still has to be done with the consent of their families.