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Classic African films released on DVD: Ousmane Sembènes
Borom Sarret and Black Girl
By Joanne Laurier
17 January 2006
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Ousmane Sembène, Senegalese author, scenarist and film
director, has been making films for over 40 years. New Yorker
Video has recently released two of Sembènes earliest
and most remarkable cinematic works on DVD: one short film, Borom
Sarret (1963), and Black Girl (1966), which also holds
the distinction of being Africas first feature film.
Born in 1923 in southern Senegal, Sembène, the son of
a Muslim fisherman, migrated as a stowaway to France in 1947 to
escape the ravages of a war-torn colonial economy. Having joined
the French Communist Party in 1950 and the anti-racist movement
MOURAP in 1951, he was working as a dock worker in Marseilles
in 1960, the year Senegal declared its independence. Within a
few years, Sembène had established himself as a novelist
and short story writer in France.
On a trip back to Senegal, Sembène was struck by or
reminded of the high levels of illiteracy. This convinced him
to turn to film rather than literature as a means of communicating
with wide layers of the population. In 1962, he enrolled at the
Moscow film school, studying under veteran Soviet director Mark
Donskoy, and then worked at Gorki film studies under the tutelage
of Sergei Gerasimov.
An unusual personality, at this point in his life Sembène
combined profound opposition to capitalism and colonialism with
a deep feeling for artistic work. He immersed himself in world
literature, including the work of left-wing (or former left-wing)
writers like Americans Richard Wright, John Dos Passos and Ernest
Hemingway, the Chilean poet Pablo Néruda, the Turkish poet
Nazim Hikmet, the Jamaican-born, African-American writer Claude
McKay and others. He also became involved with the left-wing theater
Le Theâtre Rouge.
Under such conditions, Sembène began his filmmaking
career, viewing cinema as a means of elevating consciousness,
politically and culturally ... as a liberating art.
Following his earliest films, which we discuss below, Sembène
continued to look critically at Senegalese society and Western
colonialism. For example, his 1974 film Xala lambastes
the hypocrisy and pride of the African ruling elite, while maintaining
a critical stance towards aspects of traditional African society.
The short film Taaw (1972) centers on an unemployed youth
who learns the bitter truth about the contemporary social
order: to survive one has to be a policeman, a paid informer or
a Member of Parliament. (P. Vincent Magombe, The Oxford
History of World Cinema) Similarly in Mandabi (The
Money Order, 1968), a civil servants daily survival
depends on adopting corrupt methods.
After the release of Mandabi, Sembène was subjected
to a barrage of attacks for exposing the horrific levels of misery
in Senegal, and throughout his career he faced governmental criticism
and censorship. Ceddo (1977), which reflected the
conversion of the Senegalese people to Islam [in the 17th century]
and the wretchedness of the political system (Magombe),
was banned by the government for eight years.
Like other African filmmakers, Sembène has not only
faced censorship within Africa, but as well from without, particularly
from France, which has provided much of the technical and financial
resources for the development of cinema in the former French colonies
in sub-Saharan Africa. Sembènes 1972 film Emitai,
critical of French colonial rule, was kept out of circulation
for five years and then released with a re-edited ending.
The films newly released by New Yorker Video on DVD (contained
on one disc), Borom Sarret and Black Girl, are starkly
realistic films that mesmerize by virtue of their poetic quality.
Both exemplify the richness made possible when serious art and
serious politics encounter one another. They are examples of the
sublime artistic treatment of everyday life. The urgency of each
imageas though life depended on avoiding the superficial
and extraneousdisturbs in the extreme.
Borom Sarret
Borom Sarret was Sembènes directorial debut
upon his return to Senegal in 1963. The film treats a day in the
life of an unnamed borom sarretderived from the French
phrase bonhomme charrettea horse-driven cart
driver for hire, operating in the poor quarters of Dakar. The
regular passengers of Sembènes borom sarret
include people as destitute as he is. (When is she going
to pay me? But she has her troubles too.)
As the day progresses, paying customers begin to hire his services.
Stopping for a meager lunch of nuts and burdened with worries
about what his family is eating, the wagoner becomes enthralled
by a storyteller, or griot, singing about tales of ancestral
glory. Swept away (Even if this new life enslaves me, I
am still noble), he hands over his earnings to the charismatic
minstrel.
Left desperate by this ill-conceived act, he begins taking
riskier fares. This lands him in a wealthy area of the city with
its obvious French influence. Here, amid modern high-rises and
fancy cars, the horse-drawn carts are not allowed. An arrogant,
self-important policeman stops him and hands him a ticket. Forced
to sell his cart in order to pay the fine, the cart driver returns
home with less than when he left. There is no food for him, his
wife, his children or his horse. I promised you we would
eat tonight, his wife says to her children and she leaves
with them in tow. His manhood shredded, the wagoner says meekly:
Where is she going? There is nothing to eat. A day
in the life of this borom sarret has left him with nothing
economically or spiritually.
In a 19-minute black and white short, Sembène artfully
delivers a world of extreme economic and social oppression. A
working class seething in discontent.
An aspect of the oppression explored by the film is its psychological
impact on the oppressed: the wagoners susceptibility to
the griot; his condescension and lack of sympathy for a
deformed beggar (So many beggars, they are like flies);
a shoeshine boy helplessly allowing a customer to leave without
paying; but above all, the wagoners acceptance of his place
in society, his fatalism about his conditions.
What begins as a dichotomy between the braggadocio and exploited
life of the wagoner ends with deflated illusions and a political
understanding more in line with the harsh reality of Senegals
post-colonialism. While the French colonial overlords have gone,
a brutally structured society remains intact. No amount of praying
or the invocation of ancestors alters the situation.
A painful lesson learned from being swinishly cheated out of
his only means of subsistencehis wagon. What will
I become? Its all a lie! Its the same everywhere ...
Who cares about ancestors? Im broke. It was the same yesterday
and the day before that. We all work for nothing. There is nothing
left except to die.
Black Girl
Like Borom Sarret, Sembènes Black Girl
is set in the aftermath of Senegals independence, and explores
the relationship between a Senegalese housemaid, Diouana (Mbissine
Thérèse Diop) and a French couple (Anne-Marie Jelinek
and Robert Fontaine) who employ her. Arriving from Dakar, Diouana
is to resume her employment in Antibes, on the French Riviera.
In Dakar, before her countrys independence, Diouana worked
for the French family as a nanny and expects to perform the same
duties in France.
Flashbacks show her enthusiasm
for the upcoming trip to France as well as the grinding poverty
and unemployment she will be leaving behind. Diouana fantasizes
about traveling in the European country and visiting fashionable
stores. She also leaves behind a resentful boy-friend, obviously
an African nationalist, who has a banner painted with portraits
of martyred Congolese leader Patrice Lumumba. He has no interest
in France and its attractions.
Upon Diouanas arrival in Antibes, she discovers that
the couple lives in far more modest circumstances than those they
enjoyed in Senegal. This translates into a much altered relationship
between Diouana and the couple. Looked upon as a servant, the
Senegalese girl goes without regular pay or the opportunity to
get out of the apartments cramped confines. Attempting to
offset her demeaning treatment, Diouana dresses stylishly while
performing her choresan act that further enrages Madame.
Expected to cook, clean and function as a piece of exotica
for dinner guests (I have never kissed a Negress before!
remarks a visitor), she is barely seen as human, increasingly
becoming the target of Madames frustrations. The latters
continuous refrain is: Get up you lazy, we are not in Africa!
She even strikes Diouana while the latter is lying down.
A letter from her mother berating Diouana for not sending money
is the final disappointment. She disintegrates when Monsieur tries
to assuage her by paying her overdue wages. She did not come to
France to wear an apron and make money. The soundtrack changes
from African to French music. The camera pans a populated Riviera
beach. Is this the alternative to a wretched life in Dakar?
Finding everything intolerable, Diouana comes to a tragic end,
proclaiming, Ill never again be a slave!
With his maids belongings, Monsieur returns to Dakar.
Conspicuously hidden behind sunglasses, he searches a shantytown
for Diouanas family. In an act of guilty condescension,
Monsieur attempts to compensate Diouanas mother with a cash
offeringit would not occur to him to do otherwise. The gesture
is rejected.
The movies final scenes involve Monsieur being driven
out of Senegal by Diouanas younger brother, menacingly wearing
an African mask. Monsieur departs and the boy is left weeping.
The wounds inflicted by Monsieur and Madame are permanent.
Filmed in black and white, Black Girl is, at first glance,
a study in elegance. Diops fluid movements and noble comportment
are rhythmic and beautiful, further embellished by the films
soundtrack. Critic Manny Farber described the film as a
series of spiritual odysseys: through a kitchen; a ceremonial
procedure before the bathtub suicide; a small boy, holding an
African mask over his face, following his sisters employer
across Dakar; in which the imagination of Ousmane Sembène
appears to be covering all the ground that his experience can
encompass.
Black Girls deceptive simplicity is uncompromisingly
angry in tone. There are no frills, yet every moment demands consideration.
Some of the best currents of international cinema are present:
certainly traces of Italian neo-realism, and some elements of
Soviet cinema; the film also breathes the same air, although at
a higher intellectual-political altitude, as the French New Wave.
Despite its elevated place in African cinema, Black Girls
reverberations are anything but Afro-centric.
The African mask functions as the films main motif. It
first appears when Diouana goes to work for the French family
in Dakar, a gift from the girl in appreciation for her employment.
It respectfully hangs in the home among other local works of art.
In Antibes, the mask becomes a trophy on a stark, cold wall,
mirroring the couples attitude towards Diouana and her isolation
in their custody. In one pivotal scene, Madame and Diouana fight
over the mask. An overhead camera shot of the women spinning around
impersonalizes the fierce antagonism. It is part of a bigger war.
As a genuine piece of antiquitythe real thing
says Monsieurthe mask is congealed history. Therefore, Diouanas
last act is to retake it from those who disrespect its people
and their culture. The violence of the tug-of-war unmasks
its participants, revealing something about the essential nature
of victim and victimizer, something of the struggle for power.
Monsieur returns the mask to Diouanas little brother
in Dakar, its original owner. This speaks to the failed attempt
at subjugating Diouana. The mask chases Monsieur out of Senegal.
He appears frightened by the militancy the artifact suggests/incarnates.
Behind the mask is the boys devastated face. How to deal
with the loss of Diouana and all her aspirations for a better
life? What comes next?
Borom Sarret and Black Girl are significant works
that continue to merit audiences forty years after their creation.
Both films illustrate the power that a successful interplay between
ideas and artistic technique brings to the striving for truthfulness.
Their stubborn and beautiful chronicling of reality arouses deep
feelingsfeelings intimately connected to the objective need
for social transformation.
See Also:
52nd Sydney Film
Festival
The struggle against superstition in a West African village
Moolaadé, written and directed by Ousmane Sembène
[27 July 2005]
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