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Bamako

  • 2006
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 55m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
1.6K
YOUR RATING
Aïssa Maïga in Bamako (2006)
Drama

Bamako. Melé is a bar singer, her husband Chaka is out of work and the couple is on the verge of breaking up... In the courtyard of the house they share with other families, a trial court ha... Read allBamako. Melé is a bar singer, her husband Chaka is out of work and the couple is on the verge of breaking up... In the courtyard of the house they share with other families, a trial court has been set up. African civil society spokesmen have taken proceedings against the World Ba... Read allBamako. Melé is a bar singer, her husband Chaka is out of work and the couple is on the verge of breaking up... In the courtyard of the house they share with other families, a trial court has been set up. African civil society spokesmen have taken proceedings against the World Bank and the IMF whom they blame for Africa's woes... Amidst the pleas and the testimonies, ... Read all

  • Director
    • Abderrahmane Sissako
  • Writer
    • Abderrahmane Sissako
  • Stars
    • Aïssa Maïga
    • Tiécoura Traoré
    • Maimouna Hélène Diarra
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    1.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Abderrahmane Sissako
    • Writer
      • Abderrahmane Sissako
    • Stars
      • Aïssa Maïga
      • Tiécoura Traoré
      • Maimouna Hélène Diarra
    • 20User reviews
    • 73Critic reviews
    • 81Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 2 nominations total

    Photos22

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    Top cast66

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    Aïssa Maïga
    Aïssa Maïga
    • Melé
    Tiécoura Traoré
    • Chaka
    Maimouna Hélène Diarra
    • Saramba
    • (as Hélène Diarra)
    Habib Dembélé
    • Falaï
    Djénéba Koné
    • La soeur de Chaka
    Hamadoun Kassogué
    • Le journaliste
    William Bourdon
    • Avocat partie civile
    Mamadou Kanouté
    • Avocat de la défense
    • (as Mamadou Konaté)
    Gabriel Magma Konate
    • Le procureur
    • (as Magma Gabriel Konaté)
    Aminata Traoré
    • Témoin 2
    Danny Glover
    Danny Glover
    • Cow-boy
    Elia Suleiman
    Elia Suleiman
    • Cow-boy
    Abderrahmane Sissako
    Abderrahmane Sissako
    • Cow-boy
    • (as Dramane Sissako)
    Jean-Henri Roger
    • Cow-boy
    Zeka Laplaine
    • Cow-boy
    Assa Badiallo Souko
    • Witness 5
    Zegué Bamba
    • Witness 1
    Dramane Bassaro
    • Cowboy
    • Director
      • Abderrahmane Sissako
    • Writer
      • Abderrahmane Sissako
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews20

    6.71.5K
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    Featured reviews

    8bachrabb

    Need to be heard

    I've been really surprised by this movie, It's not entertaining (narration mode very personal) and that's difficult to accept for many people.

    This movie is an alert that things are going too far in Africa in general and in Mali in particular.

    Intelligently done with many links and references to the international behavior in front of money and poverty. The glance through the cowboy movie or the interaction of the 'neighborhood' with the court to echo the speeches and how people believe in the 'trial'.

    I do recommend this movie to give a chance to African film makers to raise their voice in front of the "collecting_money_at_all_costs" machine that became IMF or the World Bank
    9gryspnik

    Documentary/Film not for the narrow minded, not for the fanatics

    I had no idea what I was getting into when I went to watch this film. I can't tell much without giving away what the movie is all about. I will only say that the "acting" is just perfect, as long as it is not acting. People are mostly activists who actually speak out the truth. The movie is highly symbolic and we have to understand that the director is not trying to be realistic or straightforward. The trial that is taking place in a regular house yard, is surrounded by the everyday lives of the people of Bamako. The result is moving, beautiful and awakening experience. Especially for those who are not very familiar with the situation in Africa and don't know or don't want to know what the West is doing to billions of people around the world in order to maintain our level of useless consumption, it will be an eye opening experience. I absolutely recommend this movie.
    5za-andres

    Good Points, but Dubiously pitched and Aesthetizised

    Bamako is more a PBS special than a flat out film. It chronicles a trial in which the World Bank is on trial itself. The film is quite anti Bush-era corporate interests (IMF, World Bank, and G8 are among the villains name-checked), but through the film (I don't even know what it is, a doc. or a film) comes the film maker's true anger which is surprisingly stimulated. In between the quasi-entertaining court-room arguments and the callous shots of town, there isn't much room to inhale pure film making. (There's even a bizarre mock-movie staring Danny Glover as in assassin in a haphazard African town.) And yet, despite the film's slog, there's something in Bamako that keeps it quietly vital, making it a true case of moral politics but pretty much a slog of a film.
    7Tweekums

    Ordinary lives intersect at a trial in Bamako

    This film is set in a small courtyard in the Malian capital, Bamako. A trial is taking place; on the one side those representing the ordinary people of Africa on the other those representing the organisations they hold responsible for the national debts that keep the people impoverished. While the trial progresses we meet various characters; some are witnesses others are ordinary people going about their lives.

    This is an interesting film even though we know such a trial would never take place and if it did it wouldn't be in a public courtyard... that isn't really a problem though. The case raises some important issues about how African nations are treated however it does feel too polemic at times; this is especially the case when a French lawyer rails against the World Bank, the IMF and the west in general towards the end... the earlier more personal testimonies from affected Africans felt far more relevant. I liked the little details away from the details of the trail; a policeman has his gun stolen while he had a nap; a singer plans to move to Senegal and locals watch 'Death in Timbuktu', a pseudo-spaghetti western starring Danny Glover... this section was particularly inventive as we switch to watching this film within the film for several minutes. Overall I'd say this was fairly interesting but I felt it would have been more interesting if we'd seen more of people's ordinary lives and a little less of the trial.
    7johnnyboyz

    Intriguing and humbling without ever coming across as melodramatic.

    Mauritanian director and writer Abderrahmane Sissako's Bamako will not be for everyone and by everyone I mean the majority of both mainstream American as well as European film-goers. The film is of the kind that borders on documentary in its approach and general feel; people talk for long periods about topics that a lot of us will have perhaps read about here and there in whatever news coverage it's been given in a respective country but few, unless you're an avid follower of African politics and the financial state in Africa, will have had as much exposure to the subject as you get in this film. In general, there are long and detailed monologues on the subject of Africa's, as a continent, financial and general situation. It is a piece of work that teeters between documentation and a sheer, out and out neo-realist piece set amidst the locals going about their business.

    The title: 'Bamako', is loud and proclaimed. The word is a proper noun – it is the capital city of Mali, an African country, and that is the tone for the film focusing on a courtroom based discussion regarding the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, a corporation set up to help fund developing or underfunded nations. The topic is straight forward: the reason the state of many African nations are in the state they are. You can imagine it being a very personal subject to many-an African director but Sissako handles it very well and it resonates; the film is not about one nation, despite having the capital of a certain nation as its title, but rather the state of a continent as a whole and the director doesn't focus on individual nations but gives everybody a voice.

    The courtroom of the title it has been released as here and there is really nothing more than a patch of sandy land in the middle of an urban area. The officials are all dressed smartly and each of them are both French and Caucasian. It's here I think Sissako places the audience into the bodies of these officials, those that are of a 'Western' origin more than anything and those that must stand and listen to the African villagers state their cases to do with living conditions as well as both quality and amount of facilities they have available to them. It's here we feel as naive as the court officials, perhaps as humbled as they are when people give their statements and accounts – some are loud and angry with a woman peeling off all these facts and figures for our benefit whereas others are quieter and more humbling but one such individual cannot say anything at all and this may be the most upsetting for most viewers.

    Perhaps there is a certain irony behind the most effective 'statement' being one delivered by someone who doesn't say anything at all, given how the film likes its extended dialogue sequences. But I think that's down to good direction and good writing if anything: the timing of the silence within the piece. Through the statements, we find that the mere area is unhealthy and lacking medicine and places to earn a living, something that should rebound on us when thinking of the bigger picture and how this is one area in Mali we're dealing with, despite the hearing's overall link to the continent.

    One cannot talk about the film without mentioning the bizarre manner in which it veers off out of the world it's taken so much time in establishing and into something else. About half way through the film, from memory, we begin watching a film within a film – a daft looking Western starring Danny Glover which I suppose acts as the film's anchor around which the theme revolves. The western film is entitled 'Death in Timbuktu', a scathing reminder that 'death' is indeed happening all the time in Timbuktu, a town in Mali, more down to the malnutrition than trigger happy cowboys. It sees American and French actors/characters struggling to deal with their surroundings which is a wired hybrid of the Old West and a typical African village with sandy terrain, huts and everything else. The pit-stop could be seen as a metaphor for Americans, the French and Western economic powers in general struggling to deal with a 'problem' in Africa as lots of really unnecessary deaths keep happening – again, in real life it's not death by a bullet as much as it is poor quality conditions.

    What I like about Bamako more than, for instance, 'Waking Life' is its approach. We're not being talked down to here and we're not following some daft, trippy sequence of events that shows off what the latest computers are capable of. Instead, we have a real situation being presented to us and arguments established before events developed. This isn't a lecture or a 'talking down to' of the audience, this is reality made by someone who's been there and is producing a film that doubles as a statement. It won't be a film for everyone but the loose narrative to do with a breakup between two people offers us a fitting conclusion, an individual reduced to tears as the emotion floods to the surface as they realise not only their life but the verdict surrounding the hearing is in a purgatory and the only outcomes are two extremes either way.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Goofs
      During the inset "Death in Timbuktu" "western," just before the first gunshot, a car can be seen moving between two buildings in the background. This, however, could be interpreted as intentional by the director, who was parodying non-Western interpretations of a "western" (other countries who partake in a love of westerns are Thailand and Cambodia). The child in this scene is also wearing a Nike shirt. The effect is to present the sort of low-budget, pulp film one might see in a television broadcast in Mali, while supplying a metaphor to the actual movie's plot.
    • Quotes

      Avocat partie civile: We cannot throw Paul Wolfowitz into the Niger. The caimans wouldn't want him.

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    FAQ

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 18, 2006 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • Mali
      • United States
    • Languages
      • French
      • Bambara
      • English
      • Hebrew
    • Also known as
      • La Cour
    • Filming locations
      • Bamako, Mali
    • Production companies
      • Archipel 33
      • Chinguitty Films
      • Mali Images
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • €2,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $112,351
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $10,183
      • Feb 18, 2007
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,059,232
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 55 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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