
Before Mozambique’s filmmakers could tell their own stories, cinema arrived as a language of empire. In the early 1900s, projectors flickered in Lourenço Marques — today’s Maputo — showing European newsreels and colonial propaganda. For settlers, these images confirmed the order of empire; for Mozambicans, they revealed a world where they were spectators rather than storytellers.
This episode explores how cinema took root in Mozambique during the colonial period:
🎥 How the first projection halls became symbols of modernity and control.
🏛️ How Portuguese administrators used film as a civilizing tool and propaganda weapon.
🗣️ How Mozambicans experienced and reinterpreted those images — from makeshift screenings in courtyards to projectionists learning the craft behind the screen.
📜 And how, in the margins of colonial cinema, the first seeds of resistance and creativity began to grow.
By 1975, as independence neared, Mozambique inherited more than empty cinemas — it inherited the machinery of storytelling. What had been a colonial instrument was about to become a revolutionary one.
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