Bushman

Bay Area Premiere of the Digital Restoration

Open Captions

In Conversation

  • Jon Shibata is BAMPFA’s film archivist.

featuring

Paul Eyam Nzie Okpokam, Elaine Featherstone, Lothario Lotho, Timothy Near, Ann Scofield, Jack Nance,

Truth is stranger than fiction in Bushman, the first feature film by David Schickele and a rare sort of film portrait—part document, part imagined poetic in its approach to real events. The year is 1968: Martin Luther King Jr., Robert Kennedy, and Bobby Hutton are among the recent dead. In Nigeria, the Civil War is entering its second year, with no end in sight. In San Francisco, the adventures of Gabriel, a young Nigerian, reflect tribal, personal, and racial frictions during the tumultuous 1960s. Film curator and critic Albert Johnson wrote: “One is immediately struck by the exciting juxtaposition of African outlooks and California urban life. For the first time in American cinema, an educated African elucidates in a no-nonsense manner the bewildering ineptness of American society to live humanistically.” 

Schickele’s bold use of nonprofessional actors in the film, combined with a semi-fictional narrative and rapportage, is nothing short of visionary. Shot in black-and-white photography, this poignant film is a powerful document of San Francisco during this tumultuous period, when the hippie counterculture and racial and social justice movements collided with law enforcement and conservative values. The shooting locations chosen for the film capture a city that no longer exists: large swaths of undeveloped land, a low skyline barely recognizable to a contemporary audience, and, most notably, the Fillmore District, a vibrant historically Black neighborhood before it was razed to make way for urban renewal.

FILM DETAILS 
Screenwriter
  • David Schickele
Cinematographer
  • David Myers
  • Stephen Lighthill
  • Kirk Smallman
Print Info
  • B&W
  • DCP
  • 74 mins
Source
  • BAMPFA
Preceded By

Give Me a Riddle

David Schickele, United States, Nigeria, 1966

Nigeria became an independent country in 1960. In 1967 it was torn apart by civil war. Between these two events a spirit of great hope prevailed through the land. Give Me A Riddle is about this golden age, seen through the eyes of Roger Landrum who, with David Schickele, returned to their host country after their Peace Corps service as teachers at the University of Nigeria, where they are welcomed as family by the villagers, university students, and friends, revealing a time capsule of a Nigeria and a Peace Corps in the rambunctious bloom of youth.

With Paul Eyam Nzie Okpokam, Gabriel Ogar, and Manze Ejiogu.

FILM DETAILS 
Print Info
  • B&W
  • Digital
  • 67 mins
source
  • BAMPFA

Event Accessibility

If you have any questions about accessibility or require accommodations to participate in this event, please contact us at bampfa@berkeley.edu or call us at (510) 642-1412 (during open hours) with as much advance notice as possible. More information on accessibility services.