Change Your Image
ceylon-1
Reviews
Ceddo (1977)
A bit slow, with some surprises. - MINOR SPOILERS
The plot is somewhat slow to develop, due to some extended dialog scenes in the beginning of the film. These scenes serve a purpose however, setting the pace and flavor of the place and period portrayed. The characterizations in the film were both stereotypical and surprising. The Imam, the Hunter-Hero, the dispossessed Heir, the new Heir, there are all standard character types, but each is treated a little differently than one might expect.
Especially odd is the Hunter-Hero, who is often analogous to the cowboy in the American Western film (rides in from the wild, solves the problem, rides off into the wild again) is treated very differently. The Imam is a bit typecast from the beginning. The physical appearance of the actor makes it clear that the Imam will be cast as a villain very early in the film. Finally, the heir never redeems himself, but simply fades out of the scene, returning in the background, but never as a person who affects the plot in any real way.
The only scene in the film that caused me any real concern was the scene where Madior Fatim Fall is sitting in the church. The white priest has what is apparently a vision of the future, with many African priests, and what seems to be the white priest laying in a coffin. It goes so quickly that I wasn't sure what has happening, except the possibility that the priest was seeing a vision of himself as a saint, preserved from corruption, for converting all the Africans. Because it is a rather jarring jump to modern times, by the time I had really recovered from my surprise, the scene was already fading back into original setting.
Afrique, je te plumerai (1992)
Disjointed and relatively uninteresting
I saw this film and my main thought the entire show was, "What is the point?" The director is trying for such a surreal and disjointed film that he overshoots and makes one that is nearly incomprehensible. The topic jumps around from colonialism to neocolonialism, to book publishing in Cameroon, political violence, and stand-up comedy.
Scenes of violence or colonial propaganda are thrown into the film with the result being too jarring. Instead of feeling anything, you are just left confused as to what happened.
The title is drawn from the well-known french song, but there is very little to connect to that song other than a brief moment in the film and a vague theme of colonialism taking advantage of the colony. Since anyone watching this film would almost certainly be familiar with the basics of colonialism, the film doesn't really add anything to the discussion.