• Black Girl

  • Black Girl

  • Black Girl

  • Borom sarret

  • Borom sarret

  • Borom sarret

Black Girl

(La noire de . . .)

4K Digital Restoration

featuring

Mbissine Thérèse Diop, Anne-Marie Jelinek, Momar Nar Sene, Robert Fontaine,

Considered Africa’s first dramatic feature film, Black Girl won Ousmane Sembène the 1966 Jean Vigo Prize at the Cannes Film Festival. It addresses lingering racism in postcolonial Africa in a visual style reminiscent of the French New Wave. Based on Sembène's novel Voltaïque, the film tells of the exile and despair of a Senegalese domestic servant, Diouana (Mbissine Thérèse Diop), who is taken to the Riviera by her French employers. Mistreated and abused by the madam, Diouana feels her life has been reduced to that of a slave, her personal freedoms denied; she chooses the ultimate act of resistance. “There are few endings in all of cinema as powerful and rich as this—brimming with tragic wisdom and latent meaning, with finality and promise, with humor and pain. . . . It is at this point that African cinema begins” (Jonathan Rosenbaum, Chicago Reader).

Susan Oxtoby
FILM DETAILS 
Screenwriter
  • Ousmane Sembène
Based On
  • Sembène’s novel Voltaïque
Cinematographer
  • Christian Lacoste
Language
  • French
  • with English subtitles
Print Info
  • B&W
  • DCP
  • 60 mins
Source
  • Janus Films
Preceded By

Borom sarret

Ousmane Sembène, Senegal, 1963

A poignant, politically charged essay on a cart driver in the poorer sections of Dakar.

FILM DETAILS 
Language
  • French
  • with English subtitles
Print Info
  • B&W
  • DCP
  • 20 mins
source
  • Janus Films

Niaye

Ousmane Sembène, Senegal, 1964

Adapted from Sembène’s own novella White Genesis, this is a portrait of a Senegalese village in decline, where the local griot bemoans the community’s loss of morals.

FILM DETAILS 
Language
  • French
  • with English subtitles
Print Info
  • B&W
  • Digital
  • 31 mins
source
  • Janus Films

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