Wakaliga Uganda: If Uganda Was America

Wakaliga Uganda: If Uganda Was America

The Renaissance Society at The University of Chicago

© Frederic Noy/Panos Pictures.

February 17, 2025
Wakaliga Uganda
If Uganda Was America
March 1–April 27, 2025
Opening celebration: March 1, 4–7pm
The Renaissance Society at The University of Chicago
Cobb Hall, 4th Floor
5811 S. Ellis Ave
Chicago 60637
USA
renaissancesociety.org

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Wakaliga Uganda, also known as Ramon Film Productions, is a Kampala-based film studio founded in 2005 by Isaac Godfrey Geoffrey Nabwana (Nabwana IGG), affectionately dubbed “Uganda’s Tarantino.” Operating on ultra-low budgets—often under 200 USD—Wakaliga creates action films that combine handmade props, untrained actors, and raw storytelling to craft a cinematic universe as inventive as it is self-aware. Cult classics like Who Killed Captain Alex? and Bad Black refract Hollywood’s hyper-violence through a distinctly Ugandan lens, offering playful yet incisive critiques of global power dynamics. More than a film studio, Wakaliga Uganda is a community hub, providing a space for local martial artists, actors, and technicians—many of them teenagers—to hone their craft. At the Renaissance Society—marking their first exhibition in the United States—Wakaliga Uganda will premiere If Uganda Was America, a speculative satire that flips geopolitical hierarchies, alongside a curated selection of their films. Presented within a site-specific installation designed by studio 2050+, the exhibition captures Wakaliga’s project beyond their DIY ethos.

 

Curated by Myriam Ben Salah.

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