| Media Contact: Laine Slater, laine@viff.org or 604.685.0262 x 809 |
|
|
"One of the most remarkable artists in the world" Jack Kroll, Newsweek
"The Dean of African Filmmakers" J. Hoberman
SEMBÈNE
January 4 - 6
Africa's foremost filmmaker, the late Ousmane Sembène (1923-2007) directed the first African feature, the continent's first colour movie and the first shot in an indigenous language (Wolof). Booted out of school in Senegal in his early teens, Sembène joined the Senegalese sharpshooters of the Free French for a four-year stint of fighting. Demobilized, he joined a West African railroad strike, became a shipyard union activist in Marseilles, began to write and, by the early 60s, was a major novelist. But realizing that literature had a limited audience, he went back to film school, with his adroitly told efforts winning awards at festivals worldwide and bringing international attention to sub-Saharan African cinema.
Sembène wasn't only a sharp critic of the internal problems of modern Africa, but also a passionate advocate of African pride and autonomy. This series collects Sembène's seminal works not yet available on DVD. Thanks to New Yorker Films. Notes adapted from Film Forum in New York.
"The seminal force behind sub-Saharan African cinema, and at the same time the world's most guileless filmmaker... Sembène's work has ached with austerity- possessed of a voice as clear and uncomplicated as sunlight." Michael Atkinson, The Village Voice
"Both a populist and a universalist... It is hard to overstate his importance, or his influence on African film." A. O. Scott, The New York Times
|
|
 |
BLACK GIRL
January 4 & 10, 7:00
Senegal 1966 // Director: Ousmane Sembène // 65 min // 35mm
Based on an actual event, Sembène's first feature combines the semi-doc technique of neo-realism with the simple, freewheeling style of the early New Wave. It's an unsparing attack on neo-colonial exploitation that put African cinema on the map. Diouana finds her pleasant babysitting chores for a French family topped by an invitation to accompany them back to France; but once there, she finds she's just "the black girl." Preceded by Borom Sarret (1964, 20 min), Sembène's first film, a day in the life of a poor cart driver.
"These films will make nearly everything else you watch for the next week feel bloated and nonessential by contrast."
Joshua Land, The Village Voice
|
|
MANDABI (The Money Order)
January 5, 9:15; January 9, 7:00
Senegal 1968 // Director: Ousmane Sembène // 90 min // 35mm
Illiterate, unemployed, fiftyish Ibrahima Deng suddenly gets a windfall: a money order from his streetsweeper nephew in France for 20,000 francs (roughly $100). But as friends, relations, and debtors close in, he finds he can't cash it without an identity card, which requires a proof of birth, which...Sembène's first colour film is a darkly humorous satire of Kafkaesque bureaucracy and corruption, as Deng concludes "honesty is a sin in this country."
"A richly comic and multi-textual first cousin to The Bicycle Thief. "
J. Hoberman.
|
 |
|
 |
EMITAI (God of Thunder)
January 4, 9:00; January 9, 8:45
Senegal 1971 // Director: Ousmane Sembène // 103 min // 35mm
"I dedicate this film to all militants of the African cause."Ousmane Sembène . When, during WWII, French troops come to a Diola village to conscript the men and confiscate the rice, the women hide the crop and the elders consult with the gods, but events slowly escalate to tragedy. Based on an actual incident, filming on location in the village of Dimbering took about seven weeks spread over a year . The film's final horrific image was blacked out by the French. |
|
XALA (The Curse)
January 6, 9:15; January 11, 7:00
Senegal 1974 // Director: Ousmane Sembène // 123 min // 35mm
Animal Farm in Africa. Fiftyish fat cat El Hadji Abdoukadr Beye enjoys a flourishing import business, two wives, and a white Mercedesand now he's appointed to the Chamber of Commerce. Time to add that third wife; but on the wedding night he fails to rise to the occasioncould he be the victim of a xala? Savagely funny satire of the new post-independence ruling class that, despite government censorship, broke Senegalese box office records.
"A masterpiece ...considered one of the best films to come out of Africa."
Time Out New York
|
 |
|
 |
CEDDO
January 5, 7:00; January 10, 8:45
Senegal 1977 // Director: Ousmane Sembène // 120 mins // 35mm
In a 19th-century village, a princess is kidnapped, and a Muslim imam struggles against a Catholic priest for religious and political control, while the ceddo ("ched-doe"), or common people, try to hold on to their traditional ways. Banned in Senegalostensibly over the "European" spelling of the title, but more likely for its criticism of Islam, Sembène's historical epic condenses two centuries of African history into a thriller of oppression and intolerance.
"Achieves an operatic orchestration of raw forces similar to Eisenstein's Alexander Nevsky or Kurosawa's Seven Samurai. "
The Village Voice.
|
|
CAMP DE THIAROYE
January 7 & 13, 7:30
Algeria/Senegal/Tunisia 1987 // Directors: Ousmane Sembène,
Thierno Faty Sow // 157 min // 35mm
In 1944, African infantrymen, back from slugging it out with the Nazis and liberating Paris, relax in a transit camp in Senegal; but as they gag on inedible food and wonder what happened to that back pay, they realize transit should read "prison", and "war heroes" should read "uppity natives." And then things get worse. Based on an actual historical incident, it won the Special Jury Prize at Venice.
"A magisterial critique of the colonial mentality."
J. Hoberman.
|
 |
|
 |
GUELWAAR
January 6 & 12, 7:00
France/Germany/Senegal 1993 // Director: Ousmane Sembène // 115 min // 35mm
"Alternately wise and very funny in its treatment of tribalism and in its grasp of neocolonial corruption, Sembene's seventh feature has so much to say about contemporary Africa that you emerge from it with a sense of understanding an entire society from top to bottom."Jonathan Rosenbaum, Chicago Reader . Bad enough that political activist Guelwaar ("the noble one") has just died mysteriously, right after a mesmerizing speech "but where's the body" Misidentified and buried in a Muslim cemetery"but he was a Catholic! The solution is obvious, but the family's disinterment plans rapidly derail as a bitingly comic firestorm of red tape, interfamilial disputes and religious turf wars threaten to escalate into mayhem. |
|
|
|
|  | | VIFC TICKETS AND INFO | Call the Starbucks Hotline 604.683.FILM (3456) for the latest info and listings. Tickets can be purchased in advance on-line at www.vifc.org or in person 30 minutes before showtime.
Double Bill Pricing!
The Vancity Theatre is offering double bills at a special price. At just $12 for two films ($10 for Students/Seniors and Bronze and above members), it's one of the cheapest (and still most comfy) seats in town!
Note: Double Bill pricing is not available for online sales. However, you can purchase your first ticket online at the regular price and get the double-bill price on the second ticket when you arrive at the box office. Double Bills are two consecutive films on the same day at the Vancity Theatre; rentals and Special Events are not included.
Adult tickets: $9.50 (Double Bill - $12)
Student/Senior $7.50 (Double Bill - $10)
Matinees $7.50
Bronze and above members receive a $2 discount on their tickets. (Double Bill - $10)
Silver and above members also receive a $2 discount for a guest ticket.
As a registered non-profit society, the VIFC screens films that have not always been seen by the BC Film Classification Board. Under BC law, any person wishing to see these unclassified films must belong to the VIFC Society and be 18 years or older. Valid for one year based on the date of purchase, the VIFC basic membership cost is $12, but includes the ticket price of your first film.
Please note that membership benefits and restrictions are valid for VIFC presentations only. They are not applicable to Vancity Theatre "Rental" presentations by other organizations.
For More Membership Information go to http://www.vifc.org/membership.html.Vancity Theatre is located at 1181 Seymour St. (at Davie) | |