IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,4/10
1469
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Dramaan ist der beliebteste Mann in Colobane, aber als eine Frau aus seiner Vergangenheit, die jetzt exorbitant reich ist, in die Stadt zurückkehrt, beginnen sich die Dinge zu ändern.Dramaan ist der beliebteste Mann in Colobane, aber als eine Frau aus seiner Vergangenheit, die jetzt exorbitant reich ist, in die Stadt zurückkehrt, beginnen sich die Dinge zu ändern.Dramaan ist der beliebteste Mann in Colobane, aber als eine Frau aus seiner Vergangenheit, die jetzt exorbitant reich ist, in die Stadt zurückkehrt, beginnen sich die Dinge zu ändern.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Auszeichnungen
- 1 Gewinn & 1 Nominierung insgesamt
Omar Ba
- Le chef du protocole
- (as Omar Ba dit 'Baye Peul')
Issa Samb
- Le Professeur
- (as Issa Ramagelissa Samb)
Rama Thiaw
- La femme du Maire
- (as Rama Tiaw)
Abdoulaye Diop
- Le Médecin
- (as Abdoulaye Yama Diop)
Oumi Samb
- La danseuse
- (as Oumy Samb)
Tcheley Hanny
- Amazone
- (as Hanny Tchelley)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
I've seen Kings Lord over before but it's Linguère turn. This Queen of Colobane has just about everyone abandoning their morals.
Watched this 30 years after its creation and am very glad I did.
A short review : the way it seems I am should feel about Fellini, I feel about this film. I enjoy some Fellini films, but for whatever reason I felt more connected to this tale.
This film has plenty of spectacle. I mention fireworks, but a carnival in fact sprouts forth from the land (and the pursue of the dishonored woman returning to her home town).
There are both metaphoric and literal hyenas circling the town. The casting of Ami Diakhate was great and this the only film she ever made as far as I can tell. Feels like that might be a story in itself.
Just read an interview with the director (who died 7 years after this film from lung cancer, perhaps a colonial-induced cancer?) Anyways I think he was just a vibrant artist and able to guide dreams both as the director of the film and as a character within it. A master puppeteer never lets you see the strings.
That scene towards the end where Diakhate's character meets with her former lover/enemy/despoiler/mayor/public enemy is rather remarkable. From gazing out at the ocean together sharing an intimate smoke, to Diakhate descending into what looks like a tomb watching from afar as the mayor meets symbolic hyenas on the outskirts of town.
Such a smooth dream-like portrayal of a jarring event.
Next up for me "Touki Bouki"
A short review : the way it seems I am should feel about Fellini, I feel about this film. I enjoy some Fellini films, but for whatever reason I felt more connected to this tale.
This film has plenty of spectacle. I mention fireworks, but a carnival in fact sprouts forth from the land (and the pursue of the dishonored woman returning to her home town).
There are both metaphoric and literal hyenas circling the town. The casting of Ami Diakhate was great and this the only film she ever made as far as I can tell. Feels like that might be a story in itself.
Just read an interview with the director (who died 7 years after this film from lung cancer, perhaps a colonial-induced cancer?) Anyways I think he was just a vibrant artist and able to guide dreams both as the director of the film and as a character within it. A master puppeteer never lets you see the strings.
That scene towards the end where Diakhate's character meets with her former lover/enemy/despoiler/mayor/public enemy is rather remarkable. From gazing out at the ocean together sharing an intimate smoke, to Diakhate descending into what looks like a tomb watching from afar as the mayor meets symbolic hyenas on the outskirts of town.
Such a smooth dream-like portrayal of a jarring event.
Next up for me "Touki Bouki"
After the twenty-year period of silence following the success of 'Touki Bouki', Mambéty's second film gives its satire a more analytical frame. The quasi-allegorical narrative structure explores the relation of past to present within a specifically-though exaggerated-political frame; its events are specifically set in a collective context, where the continuing legacy of imperialism as it effects relations gendered, sexual and economic relations in the (post)colony. Returning to her village as a fabulously wealthy citizen, for whom wealth is also index of damage, literal prosthesis-the arm made of gold!- Linguère Ramatou is something like 'Touki Bouki's' Anta some decades on, returned to take revenge on Dramaan Drameh, the man who abandoned her and has since taken up a role as a comfortable, well-liked bar owner-and a kind of de facto, unofficial mayor-within the still impoverished town. The devil's bargain-that her wealth will be that of the village if they execute him-is not only index of personal revenge, a kind of just deserts for the past sins of patriarch-Drameh paid false witnesses to testify that he was not the father of her child, leading her to be driven out of town and to a career as a sex worker-but of the inhuman and dehumanising bargains of global capital, the mendacious ways in which continuing underdevelopment and the power relations of the centre-periphery relation structure the life it's possible to live. Ramatou simply serves as the agent of the ways in which collectives are divided-whether by the structures of gendered power relations or by the 'hyena-like' rapaciousness the promise of money brings. Such economic structures rely on the mythic realities that any dream can be bought, and that its fulfilment will invariably come at the expense of others. Through a satirical broad-brush, Mambéty seeks to make such bargains specific, rather than the abstract underlay of virtually every human interaction; it makes a vivid and convincing case whose laughs have the sting of accuracy.
This is a sweet little revenge story set in a remote village in Senegal, directed by renowned film maker Djibril Diop Mambety. He is a director of unique style and vision. Watchable if you want to experiment and experience with the different kinds of worlds cinema.
A stunning adaptation of Friedrich Durrenmatt's coldly brilliant play, The Visit, HYENES (hyenas) actually improves on the story by transposing the action to a Senegalese village. A fabulously wealthy old woman, who was born in the village but run out in disgrace as pregnant youth, returns and promises the villagers a fortune on one condition: that they kill the man who ruined her, an aged man who is the town's popular, good-natured grocer.
By moving the story from Durrenmatt's European setting to a dirt-poor African village, all the tensions are heightened, and the director Mambety sets the huge issues in high relief against the desert backdrop: justice, betrayal, revenge, guilt, greed (or need?), loyalty, and charity are played out in a searing (and searingly beautiful) desert, filmed with the grace of Bergman and written with the wryness of Bunuel. There are no good guys. It's up to you if there are bad guys. Everyone is a predator.
By moving the story from Durrenmatt's European setting to a dirt-poor African village, all the tensions are heightened, and the director Mambety sets the huge issues in high relief against the desert backdrop: justice, betrayal, revenge, guilt, greed (or need?), loyalty, and charity are played out in a searing (and searingly beautiful) desert, filmed with the grace of Bergman and written with the wryness of Bunuel. There are no good guys. It's up to you if there are bad guys. Everyone is a predator.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesRestored over the course of 2017 by Eclair Digital in Vanves, France. The restoration was taken on by Thelma Film AG.
- VerbindungenFeatured in The Story of Film: An Odyssey: Movies to Change the World (2011)
Top-Auswahl
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Details
Box Office
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 24.672 $
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 24.672 $
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