The purpose of the African Women in Cinema Blog is to provide a space to discuss diverse topics relating to African women in cinema--filmmakers, actors, producers, and all film professionals. The blog is a public forum of the Centre for the Study and Research of African Women in Cinema.

Le Blog sur les femmes africaines dans le cinéma est un espace pour l'échange d'informations concernant les réalisatrices, comédiennes, productrices, critiques et toutes professionnelles dans ce domaine. Ceci sert de forum public du Centre pour l'étude et la recherche des femmes africaines dans le cinémas.

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22 October 2013

Sacre au festival du film africain de Cordoue : Le Griot de Maty Diop brille de Mille soleils | Hailed at the African Film Festival of Cordoba Mati Diop’s Griot Award for “Mille Soleils” Shines


Sacre au festival du film africain de Cordoue : Le Griot de Maty Diop brille de Mille soleils | Hailed at the African Film Festival of Cordoba Mati Diop’s Griot Award for Mille Soleils Shines. Image Source: lequotidien.sn 
[Français]
Lors de la cérémonie de clôture et la présentation des prix Griots, le documentaire Mille Soleils (2013), déjà prix Fib Marseille 2013, a remporté le Griot du meilleur documentaire. Selon un document parvenu au journal Le Quotidien, «La jeune réalisatrice, fille du musicien Wasis Diop et nièce du réputé cinéaste sénégalais Djibril Diop Mambety, a récupéré le chef d’œuvre Touki Bouki (1973), dirigé par son oncle Mambety, pour explorer l’héritage personnel et universel laissé par ce film de culte, à travers le témoignage de Magaye Niang. Ce dernier est l’acteur qui incarna le protagoniste du film, Mory, en 1973». Retrouvez l'article dans son intégralité @ lequotidien.sn 

[English]
Excerpted from the article by Gilles Arsene Tchedji, Monday 21 October for lequotidien.sn. Translated from French by Beti Ellerson
At the closing ceremony and the presentation of the Griot Awards, the documentary Mille Soleils (2013), having already received the FIB Marseille 2013, wins the Griot for best documentary. Cited from an earlier Le Quotidien article: “The young filmmaker, daughter of musician Wasis Diop and niece of the renowned Senegalese Djibril Diop Mambety, reconstructs the masterpiece Touki Bouki (1972) directed by her uncle Mambety, to explore the personal and universal legacy of the cult film Touki Bouki through the character of Magaye Niang, the actor who embodied Mory, the protagonist of the film in 1972. The jury that presented the award to Mille Soleils (Thousand Suns) by Mati Diop emphasised, “its force and relevance to our times; acclaiming an innovative film that combines tradition and modernity with great finesse. With superb creativity the film conveys the extent in which the ties to the past opens new paths in the present and how its valuable insights may energise the future”…the film allowed the spectators to observe the evolution of the Mory character, who in Mille Soleils is now called by his name, Magaye Niang. Yet, his personality is really influenced by the personage of Mory.  He notes that, even though receiving an offer to go to Hollywood to continue his career, he got lost along the way. In the documentary, Mati Diop is surrounded by Magaye Niang and other actors as they reflect on the success of Touki Bouki, already known for its reflexivity and poetic avant-gardism.  The spectator discovers what has happened during the last 40 years since the voyage of the hyenas, Touki Bouki”.

According to certain observers, “the oeuvre reflects on the world of cinema and proposes a subtle critique of capitalism in the way Ousmane Sembene, one of the fathers of African cinemas and in particular, Senegalese cinema, once did: the documentary returns thus to the timeless debate of the universal phenomenon: emigration.”



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