Ben’Imana 2026

Directed by Marie-Clémentine Dusabejambo Fresh

Winning the Camera D’or for best debut at Cannes, this powerful drama wrestles with truth, justice and forgiveness during community-based reconciliation proceedings eighteen years after the horrors of Rwanda’s 1994 genocide.

Aug 22

Massey University National Academy of Screen Arts Cinema

France / Gabon / Ivory Coast / Norway / Rwanda In Kinyarwanda with English subtitles
101 minutes
TBC
NZ Classification TBC

Director, Screenplay

Producers

Samantha Biffot, Marie Epiphanie Uwayezu, Pierre-Adrien Ceccaldi, Marie-Clémentine Dusabejambo

Cinematography

Mostafa El Kashef

Editor

Nadia Ben Rachid

Production Designer

Ricardo Sankara

Music

Igor Mabano

Cast

Clémentine U. Nyirinkindi, Kesia Kelly Nishimwe, Isabelle Kabano

Festivals

Cannes (Un Certain Regard) 2026

Awards

Caméra d'Or (Best First Film), Cannes Film Festival 2026

A moving portrait of a nation still feeling the brutal ruptures of the 1994 genocide, Ben’Imana follows a rural mountainous community that remains tangled in tension nearly two decades on. With survivors and perpetrators of mass slaughter living in close proximity, community-based reconciliation proceedings have begun.

Vénéranda (Clémentine U. Nyirinkindi) has been asked to forgive fellow villager Karangwa (Aime Valens Tuyisenge), the man charged with killing her siblings, relatives and neighbours. As Vénéranda approaches the decision with grace, her sole surviving sibling Suzanne (Isabelle Kabano, the only professional actor in the cast) seethes — what authority does Vénéranda have to forgive the man who committed such atrocities, who murdered Suzanne’s husband and baby? At home, Vénéranda’s teenage daughter Tina (Kesia Kelly Nishimwe) falls pregnant, forcing Vénéranda to confront her own contradictory convictions.

Directed by Marie Clémentine Dusabejambo, Ben’Imana is not only the first film by a Rwandan filmmaker to be selected in Cannes Official Selection, but a stark, compassionate look at the open wound of a nation marked by violent suffering and the impossibility of resolution when trauma and shame reverberates through generations.

– Amanda Jane Robinson