Private Project

boju weyín

boju weyín is an adaptation of Nigerian-American poet and filmmaker Bimpé Fageyinbo’s 2010 book, so maybe that’s the bees weakness.

"boju weyín," the title of the film, means to look back; to look to the past in Yoruba.

The film uses experimental storytelling techniques to explore love, heartbreak, and grief. Carrying viewers through mundane yet intimate tasks, boju weyín invites audiences to share in poignant moments of reflection and a path towards healing.

  • Bimpé Fageyinbo
    Director
  • Bimpé Fageyinbo
    Writer
  • Farooq Alihassan
    Key Cast
  • Bimpé Fageyinbo
    Key Cast
  • Bimpé Fageyinbo
    Producer
  • Ademola James
    Executive Producers
  • fayemi shakur
    Executive Producers
  • Robin Gaby-Fisher
    Executive Producers
  • Lola and Jevan Willis
    Executive Producers
  • Kimberly Manjarres
    Executive Producers
  • Pé Monastery
    Executive Producers
  • Project Title (Original Language):
    boju weyín
  • Project Type:
    Experimental, Short
  • Genres:
    Art, Memoir, Experimental, Drama
  • Runtime:
    26 minutes 2 seconds
  • Country of Origin:
    United States
  • Country of Filming:
    United States
  • Shooting Format:
    Digital
  • Film Color:
    Color
  • First-time Filmmaker:
    Yes
  • Student Project:
    No
Director Biography - Bimpé Fageyinbo

Bimpé Fageyinbo is a Nigerian artist—a poet, filmmaker, and photographer. Her current work utilizes poetry, film, prose, and documentary photography to answer our most profound inner questions, exploring issues related to race, culture, faith, introspection, and identity. Fageyinbo’s literary and visual storytelling is notably poetic, experimental, and conceptual—organically weaving the human experience with social anthropological perspectives. 

Fageyinbo is the author of so maybe that’s the bee’s weakness (2010) and what was me (2017), the first two books in a continuing memoir series. Some of her collaborative work includes two A Womb of Violet Anthologies, archived in collections such as The Metropolitan Museum of Art Library, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, and Library of Congress.

Fageyinbo’s narrative-short film, boju weyín (2022), is an adaptation of her 2010 book, so maybe that’s the bees weakness. The film uses experimental storytelling techniques to explore love, heartbreak, and grief and invites viewers to share in poignant moments of reflection and a path toward healing. boju weyín has received multiple film festival Official Selections and was awarded Honorable Mention for Best Narrative Film at the Los Angeles Film Awards (March 2022). 

In March of 2023, Fageyinbo was commissioned by the City of Newark, NJ to write and perform her poem “freedom for freedom” at the historic Harriet Tubman Monument Unveiling ceremony hosted by Audible and the City of Newark. 

She is currently working on a third book of poetry, a photo documentary about mobility in Nigeria, and continues to teach at the university level, teaching courses in Journalism and Media, Creative Writing, African Diasporic Literature, and Film.

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