Silas (2017) Silas is the story of award-winning activist
Silas Siakor and his army of citizen journalists who risk their lives to document corruption and illegalities in both the
extractive industries and government of Liberia. The film premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival in September 2017 and was acquired by Amazon. The film was supported by the MacArthur Foundation, Ford Just Films, the Tribeca Film Institute, the Sundance Documentary Fund, Sundance Skoll Stories of Change, the IDFA Bertha Fund, the Hot Docs Blue Ice Group Fund, The Alter-Cine Foundation, and the PUMA Catalyst Award. The film was co-directed by
Hawa Essuman and
co-produced by
Steven Markovitz. Executive producers for the project included
Edward Zwick,
Leonardo DiCaprio, Jenn Davisson, Neil Tabaznik and Robin During the making of
Silas, Nayar worked with Liberian activists to create the TIMBY (This Is My Backyard) reporting tools, now deployed in 21 languages in 40 countries around the world.
Gun Runners (2016) Gun Runners is the story of two warriors from Northern
Kenya who trade in their
AK-47s for running shoes and the dream of
marathon running. The film was produced by the National Film Board of Canada and premiered at the Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival in
Toronto on 2 May 2016 to sold-out crowds. Shortly after the film's completion, one of the film's main characters, Robert Matanda and his wife, Stella Ebei, were killed in a car accident when the bus they were travelling in was hit by a truck. Their youngest child, named Anjali, was in the car with them but survived the crash. Nayar and the other filmmakers involved in
Gun Runners started a Trust and are taking care of the seven children who Matanda supported. Nayar began a
GoFundMe campaign in April 2016. The team raised over $10,000 for the children within the first couple of weeks following the premiere.
Gun Runners is currently in its theatrical phase and has screened theatrically in Australia.
Gun Runners was screened at the
Palm Springs International Film Festival in January 2017 and has been profiled by
Daily Vice. The film is currently on
Netflix.
Just A Band Just A Band (in production) follows the story of four twentysomethings in
Nairobi, Kenya, who drop out of university to form an
art collective, creating a counter narrative to the lives expected of them. In the film, the four friends form a pact to go to space. Just A Band contains a mishmash of
post-modern cultural influences such as the work of
Sun Ra,
Kung Fu movies, and
hip hop. Just A Band paints a truer picture of urban Africa than you can imagine. The film is supported by Sundance,
Cinereach, the Ted Rogers Fund, the Hot Docs Blue Ice Group, Worldview, and the PUMA Catalyst Award.
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