Friday, March 28, 2008

Ten Films You Should See If You Love Black People

FILM 5
from the Ebony/Jet site by Jacquie Jones:

Djibril Diop Mambety

For my money, this is one of the greatest African films ever made. The incredibly rich visually layered cautionary tale touches on both the greatest ambitions and the pettiest impulses of each of us. To say it is the story of a wronged woman, forced into prostitution, who returns to the scene of the crime to get her revenge, would be almost entirely missing the point. Djbril Diop Mambety, the film’s director, sadly died a few years ago, a relatively young man. When he left us, he took one of the most visionary talents of African cinema with him. The noted African film critic, Manthia Diawara, described Mambety’s premiere of Hyenas as “the entry of an auteurist viewpoint into African cinema. Mambety was to Carthage '92 what John Ford and Orson Welles had been to Cannes.”

From IW: I keep saying that I have to get more familiar with African filmmaking...this seems like something that should be seen.



Here is an interview with Djibril regarding the film:

Interview with Djibril Diop Mambety
Southern African Film Festival--1993
Africa Film & TV Magazine


Djibril Diop Mambety, director of the award winning Hyenas (click on picture for Real Video clip, "Ramatou's Arrival") which played to packed audiences at the recent Southern African Film Festival, talks with Rachel Rawlins about his art, god, and the World Bank.

INTERVIEWER: Just tell me your name and your occupation and how you'd like to be described.

DJIBRIL: My name is Djibril. My first name is Djibril. Djibril is Gabriel, like the angel. If I have to describe myself I can say that I am just a history of a dream.


INTERVIEWER: A history of a dream. What do you mean by that?

DJIBRIL: All my life is a dream. All my friends too.


INTERVIEWER: So you're a maker of dreams.

DJIBRIL: Kind of.

INTERVIEWER: Hyenas has been very popular here. I understand that at the opening of the Festival you stood up and said that it is about the World Bank. Tell me about that.

DJIBRIL: Its earned millions many millions. It takes place in a poor city, amongst poor people and what I'm saying is : if you want money one of you will have to be killed. The World Bank and it's International Monetary Fund did the same......with the poor South of the world. They tell the African people "we know that you're poor but you have too many peoples working and you don't have enough money to pay them so you have to kill some of them. Then we can give you money. You have to clean up your economy. kill enough people and we will give you money."


INTERVIEWER: So you think that the people of Africa have accepted this and that they are killing their own people because of the World Bank's money?

DJIBRIL: Yes, it's mathematics. Kill and the money will be here


INTERVIEWER: In the beginning of the film and at the end there are scenes of elephants which don't really appear anywhere else. Is there any significance to this?

DJIBRIL: You know in the beginning I kill them. You have elephants going away with the wind. They are the time. They are the life going on, and between the elephants at the beginning and the elephants at the end, you have the kingdom of Hyenas. Hyenas are not the time, elephants are the time and during that time Hyenas like you and I will try to survive. You know the Hyena is a terrible animal. He is able to follow a lion, a sick lion during all seasons. And during the lion's last days it comes down and jumps on him and eats him, eats the lion peacefully. That is the life of the World Bank. They know we are sick and poor and we have some dignity. But they can wait, wait for the last days when you say OK, I know my dignity is meat. I want to survive. Please take my dignity and kill me with your money.


INTERVIEWER: To me the hero gained dignity through his sacrifice. He had no dignity at the beginning but he gained dignity because he came to terms with his fate and accepted it with dignity. So are you saying that this is a positive aspect of the African condition - a sacrifice that has to be made? Are you saying that it is inevitable that the world bank comes in and demands this and people have to pay that price?

DJIBRIL: You know the world bank is just a picture. If the west leaves Africans alone, their money and the profit will stay the same strong force. But you know Africans are also like the world bank. Hyenas, please, hyenas. It's the money. They're the same slaves to money and that's perhaps a heritage from the west.


INTERVIEWER: So is there no hope? You have elephants at the end which seems to imply that there is some kind of standard, some kind of hope.

DJIBRIL: There is some kind of hope. Hyenas are frightened and elephants follow the wind. They follow the wind and follow the life.


INTERVIEWER: Why did you make this film, apart from the fact that it was a story that had to be told? Are you hoping that your audience will learn something from it or act on it? Is it a didactic film in any way? Do you want to change anything with it?

DJIBRIL: My last hope is that my children become elephants away from Hyenas. For me a film should be a bomb, a bomb of emotion like a rush -not a joy for forgetting reality, but a joy for opening your sweet dream for the reality.


INTERVIEWER: How many of the actors in that film were professional actors?

DJIBRIL: I can't say. (pause). Three are professionals. No more. You know why? Myself, I am actor. I came from the theatre to the cinema. I never learnt cinema in any schools. That's why I like working with non-professionals. The difference between professionals and non- professionals is a professional learns about his character in order to play it, but a non-professional plays with his own person, his own soul, his present soul and tries to make do with it. That's why they are more truthful to their material. They are nearer life than a professional.


INTERVIEWER: How long did it take you to get the quality of performance that you got from your actors? Did you train them? You must have had to work substantially with them in order to get that quality of performance.

DJIBRIL: I Just asked them who they wanted to play or which character they wanted to be. Most of them knew their characters because all these people in the story came from bars, from townships, like the one in the film. They live with Hyenas, and I am sure that in the darkness of the world, they also dream of being elephants.


INTERVIEWER: Do you think that African film is a specific sort of animal? Is it different from Hollywood? You've made an extraordinary film in terms of the power - the kind of mythological power of the story - and also the quality of the photography. Do you think that the African continent has something in particular to offer ?

DJIBRIL: African film makers I am sure are able to reinvent the cinema. Cinema is a young invention we are now in the year 1993 and the cinema will have it's first centenary in '95. It's still a very young invention. Africa can rediscover that moment of the invention of cinema. Birds know what god is like. They are nearer than Hyenas to god. They are like some kind of elephant whose wings flow in the wind, and African Film makers can be birds for reinventing the seventh art. We are perhaps poor in money but so rich by situation and hope.


INTERVIEWER: So what is it about Hyenas that is reinventing the cinema? What is it that is like a bird about Hyenas?

DJIBRIL: Birds are the next step. Let's follow birds - birds are our dreams - and reinvent cinema


INTERVIEWER: Why did you move from theatre to film to express your dreams?

DJIBRIL: Cinema can reach more people than theatre. I prefer theatre to making films, but I lost my own theatre many years ago. In 68 I left the national theatre to make my first film "Contrast City" in 1969. From that time I haven't made many films. I must just wait for when the dream is ready to take off. I waited for that moment, my life's dream, your dream.


INTERVIEWER: But to me you are not putting theatre onto film. You are very definitely using film in an innovative way, by exploiting the medium to its utmost.

DJIBRIL: Theatre is theatre. Film is film. As I said, film is a very young invention and I have to follow how others are making films. I am free with pictures. Every time I make a film I want to reinvent film. When I make films I want to make sure that there exists this sense of reinvention and this is very difficult to do. I prefer walking like an elephant rather than making films like a Hyena.


INTERVIEWER: What about the films that you've seen here in Harare? Do you think that there are people that are making films just for the sake of making films.... who are making films like Hyenas in Africa?

DJIBRIL: You know I don't often go to the cinema. Personally, I prefer films in the eyes of younger filmmakers - for myself it's better than going to see films.

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