Co-produced with the Black Film Institute of the University of the
Transcription
Co-produced with the Black Film Institute of the University of the
Co-produced with the Black Film Institute of the University of the District of Columbia the vision. the voice. From LA to London and Martinique to Mali. We bring you the world of Black film. Ifyou're concerned about Black images in commercial film and television, you already know that Hollywood does not reflect the multicultural nature 'of contemporary society. You know that when Blacks are not absent they are confined to predictable, one-dimensional roles. You may argue that movies and television shape our reality or that they simply reflect that reality. In any case, no one can deny the need to take a closer look at what is COIning out of this powerful medium. Black Film Review is the forum you've been looking for. Four times a year, we bring you film criticiSIn froIn a Black perspective. We look behind the surface and challenge ordinary assurnptiorls about the Black image. We feature actors all.d actresses th t go agaul.st the graill., all.d we fill you Ul. Oll. the rich history of Blacks Ul. Arnericall. filrnrnakul.g - a history that goes back to 19101 And, Black Film Review is the only magazine that brings you news, reviews and in-deptll interviews frOtn tlle tnost vibrant tnovetnent in contelllporary film. You know about Spike Lee but wIlat about EuzIlan Palcy or lsaacJulien? Souletnayne Cisse or CIl.arles Burnette? Tllrougllout tIle African cliaspora, Black fi1rnInakers are giving us alternatives to tlle static itnages tIlat are proeluceel in Hollywood anel giving birtll to a wIlole new cinetna... be tIlere! VDL.G NO.2 2 2 E e Street, NW as ing on, DC 20006 2 2 466-2753 o acquie Jones istant Editors D. Kamili Anderson Peter J. Harris Consulting Editor Tony Gittens ( lack Film Institute) sociate Editor/Film Critic Arthu r Johnson sociate Editors Pat Aufderheide Roy Campanella, II Victoria M. Marshall Mark A. Reid Mi riam Rosen Saundra Sharp Clyde Taylor Art Director/Graphic Designer Davie Smith Advertising Director Sheila Reid Editorial Interns Nicole Dickens Kayhan Parsi Founding Editor David Nicholson 1985 - 1989 Black Film Ravie (ISSN 0887-5723) is published four times a year by Sojourner Productions, Inc., a non-profit corporation organized and incorporated in the District of Columbia. This issue is co-produced with the Black Film Institute of the University of the District of Columbia. Subscriptions are $12 per year for individuals, $24 peryearfor institutions. Add $10 per year for overseas subscriptions. Subscription requests ,and correspondence should be sent to P.O. Box 18665, Washington, D.C. 20036. Send all other correspondence and submissions to the above address; submissions must include a stamped, self-addressed envelope. No part of this publication may be reproduced without written consent of the publisher. Logo and contents copyright (c) Sojourner Productions, Inc., 1990, and in the name of individual contributors. Black Film Review welcomes submissions from writers, but we prefer that you first query. with a letter. All unsolicited manuscripts must be accompanied by a stamped, self-addressed ~nvelope. We are not responsible for unsolicited "manuscripts. Black Film Review has signed a code of practices with the National Writers Union, 13 Astor Place, 7th Floor, New York, N.Y. 10003. This issue of Black Film Review was produced with the assistance of grants from the D.C. Commission on the Arts and Humaniti.es, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. Interview:- - - - - - - - - - - - --- - - - - - by Pat Aufderheide Malian filmmaker Cheikh Oumar Sissoko discusses his latest film, Finzan, aselfconscious experiment in storytelling 4 MO· BETTER BLUES The Music 6 by Eugene Holley, Jr. TheMan------------------- 8 by Lett Proctor TheMovie 12 by Kalamu ya Salaam How to Make Trouble - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - by Jacquie Jones The recent Canadian release, How to Make Love to a Negro Without Getting Tired, has stirred up some trouble in the US-but for the wrong reasons 14 What's New in the Cinema of Senegal _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ by Francoise Pfaff Filmmakers Mousa Bathily and Cheikh Ngaido Bah discuss their latest projects and movie-making in Senegal today 16 FEATURES The Market: - - - Shopping for Images by Victoria Marshall The American Film Market - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 24 Books: - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 26 No Identity Crisis by John Williams Melvin and Mario Van Peebles' new making-of-the-film book Film Clips: - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2 PBS Goes to Sundance, Gunn Tribute at the Whitney, and more Reviews:_ - - - - ~ - - - - - - - - Def by Temptation, Bal Poussiere and Without You I'm Nothing - - - Calendar _ Classifieds - - 20 _ 32 _ - HOW TO MAKE TROUBLE ,14 - - 33 PBS GOES TO SUNDANCE by Ellen Hoffman The majestic snowdusted Rockies and rustic cabins, screening room and rehearsal hall of the Sundance Institute in Utah provided a serene setting for an animated, provocative conference of 100 minority women in the media in May. It was designed to bring women of color who are practicing filmmakers into contact with leading producers, directors and writers, both to discuss professional issues and to encourage connections that could result in funding, production and distribution of their films. For two-and-a-half days, invited participants attended panel discussions and presentations, a "walkabout" networking session, and screenings and discussions with women of color about the films they have produced. Euzhan Palcy, director of A Dry White Season, and Suzanne DePasse, president of Motown Productions, confronted the issue of how much a filmmaker must compromise in order to attain success in Hollywood. Palcy recounted the fight-which she ultimately won-to make "A Dry White Season" the story of a Black family as well as that of a white one. DePasse suggested that "a hot script is the way to break into Hollywood." She added that "right now, it happens (that Hollywood is looking for) white male 2 F i I m eli p s gram included an afternoon-long "walkabout," in which participants were able to schedule brief appointments to discuss proposals for funding, production and distribution opporsessions, participants action pictures." DePasse tunities for their projects alluded to the difficulty of garnered a burst of apwith representatives of plause when she asserted: convincing white television PBS, some Hollywood "Some day a Black is going decision-makers to air studios, foundations and programs about minority to write a mainstream the British Broadcasting white commercial picture." figures or issues. One Corp. conference participant Another major discusThe screening schedule reported the difficulty of sion theme was the included "Family Gatherconvincing white television ing," Lise Yasui's attempt definition of such "multicultural programming" and decision-makers that Miles to understand her JapaDavis was an appropriate the challenge of delivering nese relatives' internment subject for a television it to the public television in camps in the U.S. during audience. Jennifer Lawson, show. World War II; Jude Pauline "When minority produc- Eberhard's "Break of executive vice president for National Programming and ers have to deal with Dawn," about a SpanishPromotion Services at PBS, producers and executives language radio and recordwho are non-minority, the defined multi-cultural ing star who protests the burden is put on us to programming as by and anti-Mexican policies of the convince (them) that this about ethnic, racial and U.S. government during regional groups, but geared part of our culture is valid," the Depression; and Julie observed Gail Christian, in- Dash's forthcoming to a general audience for dependent producer, the prime time schedule. "Daughters of the Dust." former PBS official and Mercedes de Uriarte, an Question-and-answer conference co-director. To sessions with producers assistant professor of journalism at the University illustrate, she suggested. followed. of Texas, warned against a turning the tables, imaginYvonne Smith's "Adam "vegetable soup" approach ing a situation in which the Clayton Powell," an decision-makers were all to programming, one that episode in PBS's series, would dilute representation Black and a white "The American Experifilmmaker "came in with a ence," provoked of each ethnic or racial program on Pavarotti and group's uniqueness. She we all said: 'Who's cited statistics showing Pavarotti?' challenging that 76.5 percent of the producer to television news directors defend the are white males; 15.6 proposal. percent white females; 5 To facilitate percent black males; 3 networking percent Hispanic males; between the 1.3 percent black females and 1 percent Latinas. She filmmakers and the decisionsuggested that placing makers, the promore people of color in such decision-making JennfferLawson, execupositions is a condition of achieving more truly multi- tive vice president, National Programming and cultural programming. Promotion Services Public In other conference Broadcasting Service ••••• the most spirited discussion, including criticism from viewers who felt that the film did not focus enough on the role of racism in contributing to the late congressman's downfall. The screenings also afforded the opportunity to discuss technical issues such as the use of animation and video techniques and musical scores. Although much of the conference discussion addressed frustrating and emotional issues that face minority women in the media, the main message that emerged was probably best put by Latina filmmaker Sylvia Morales, who told an interviewer: "A lot of women of color dwell too much on the difficulties. (But the difficulties) are a given." Her advice to . her colleagues? "Whatever you want to do-write or produce-just do it!," even if it means volunteering to work on a project free. "Have a plan, and then have a Plan B in case Plan A doesn't work out. If you don't have stamina, don't get into this business." The conference was sponsored by the Public Broadcasting Service. - Ellen Hoffman is a freelance writer who lives in Washington, DC. WHIDIY TRIBUTE FOR GUI\I\I Bill Gunn, the late Black pioneer actor-directorscenarist-author-playwright, was honored at the Whitney Museum of American Art in June the day before the opening of his play, the Forbidden City, starring Gloria Foster. Gunn died last year of encephalitis. Curated by author Ishmael Reed, the publisher of Gunn's second novel, Rhinestone Sharecropping (1981), and his award-winning play, Black Picture Show (1975), the tribute was a once-in-alifetime event reuniting friends and admirers of Gunn's work who flew in from every major city in the country. Among the films and videos showcased on the program was Ganja and Hess, Gunn's surrealistic tour-de-force horror which he starred in, wrote, and directed; his "soap opera," Personal Problems Vol. I and II (1980-1982), which used cinema verite technique to depict the fluctuating values of a Black urban working-class family; and the belated premiere of Stop! (1970), Gunn's Xrated, sex-death thriller made for Warner Brothers which marked his Hollywood directorial debut. A lurid, mystery-suspensedrama a la Bergman, the film was a pioneer BlackHispanic coproduction shot in Puerto Rico. Gunn's career hit a high point in 1970 when Hal Ashby hired him to write the screenplay for The Landlord (United Artists), produced by Norman Jewison. The film established his talent as a screenwriter. Gunn's screenplays include Fame (Columbia) and The Angel Levine (United Artists). Gunn also penned All the Rest Have Died, his first novel, and collaborated with the late Kathleen Collins on Losing Ground, in which he starred, and Women, Sisters and Friends. (See Black Film Review: Vol 5, No.2) -John Williams maybe two, African American producers. These become their 'in-house' minorities. They proudly showcase the one African American in residence and expect to be congratulated. There are far too many imaginative producers NAACP BLASTS available for the studios. to limit the numbers they STUDIOS FOR hire." "TOK8IISM" Disney was the only studio the report acknowlSandra Evers-Manly, edges as having "actively president of the Beverly searched" for more African Hills/Hollywood branch of Americans in areas in the NAACP, has authored a which we have traditionally report analyzing studio been under-represented. hiring practices. Contrary Disney has launched a to recent articles in the minority writers program. New York Times that Evers-Manly is planning present a highly favorable to release a final report in picture of the picture of September, in which each Blacks in Hollywood, the studio will receive a NAACP report reveals that there are actually fewer job "grade" based on its hiring practices. opportunities today for Blacks than there were a decade ago. CHARLES "Ten years ago at least BURNETT'S there were a few African American executives," the "AMERICA BEreport states. "Ten years COMING" FOR PBS ago at least there were Award-winning producers and production filmmaker Charles Burnett companies that were a is currently in postviable part of the system." The brief report mentions production on a documentary special for PBS, the "invisible ceiling" that entitled America Becoming. exists in the studio strucThe project originated with ture that prevents African its producer, Daisil Kim-GiAmericans and other bson, who raised producpeople of color from reaching top management tion financing from the Ford Foundation. America and important creative Becoming explores our positions. Evers-Manly, increasingly pluralistic who has been negotiating society and the matrix of with studio executives for ethnic interactions in six improved hiring practices cities including Miami, since March, states in the Chicago and Houston. report: "... our meetings Burnett's latest feature film, and investigations have To Sleep With Anger, also highlighted the trend starring Danny Glover, will towards 'tokenism.' Stube released this fall. _ dios have signed one, 3 Cheikh Oumar Si by Pat Aufderheide M" comic standoff.) One woman tells the official, 'We're tired of killing ourselves for the likes of you." N anyuma is recaptured, transported to her dead husband's village, and dragged through a civil" wedding. Her son organizes a raucous campaign of humiliation against Bala by lacing his water with an herb that gives him diarrhea and flatulence and by intimidating Bala with imitations of spirits; the gambits buy Nanyuma time on her wedding night. The villagers then march on the local police station to free the chief. This experience emboldens the women to ask what the villagers will do about the plight of Nanyuma, threatening not to sleep with their husbands until it is resolved. about women's rights facing the entire community. Ultimately Finzan is not the story of Nanyuma but of the social crisis precipitated by Nanyuma's (and Fili's) resistance to tradition. The drama is not intimate and psychological, but social. The camera's focus is typically on the small group--with plenty of room for side and background actionrather than on an individual. Editing is minimalist and camerawork is often static as if the director, through the camera, were introducing us to an exemplary scene rather than attempting to erase the psychological distance between spectator and character. alian film director Cheikh Oumar Sissoko, whose second feature film Finzan debuted in the U.S. simultaneously at the San Francisco Film Festival and at Filmfest D.C~ in Washington, D.C., boldly terms hinlself a politically engaged 'filmmaker. His works combine a search for popular form with a goal of raising debate on critical social issues. \ In Finzan, a moral narrative with tragic overtones is laced with slapstick comedy that draws from folk theater. It is a tale that Sissoko intended to entertain as well as teach. The story focuses on the trials of two women: Nanyuma, a he social crisis is an open recent widow, and her citified subject for debate, rather than niece, Fili, who has never underone that emerges through isolated gone the traditional clitoridecpersonal decision. Thus, characters tomy. ut not all organizing by women openly denounce or proclaim Her cruel husband's death goes in a progressive direction. their views. A woman says, "Are liberates Nanyuma, but all too Fili returns with Nanyuma, on her women human beings or slaves?" soon the village chief approves a father's orders, to the village. But and the chief says, "Excision is at polygamous marriage with her hus- there she creates a scandal because the very base of our tradition!" band's buffoonish and idiotic she has never been excised. That debate is reinforced by the brother, Bala. Nanyuma, in love Women, backed by the stern chief, with a handsome single man who excise her by force and she is taken soap opera plot twists, and by uninflected touches such as the vhad begged the chief for her hand away bleeding by her father. constant sight of women at work in without avail at her first marriage, N anyuma and her son finally the background of the central fights the arrangement. She goes manage to leave the village unconstory. into hiding in her brother-in-Iaw's tested, with her son quite possibily Finzan is a self-conscious experito find a better life. She leaves bevillage; her.niece Fili supports her ment in filmic storytelling on conbut her brother-in-law tells her she hind a village that has tasted the troversial social issues. It offers must marry his other brother, Bala. success of community organizing jokes and buffoonery targeted at Meanwhile, the village receives a and that has gone through a the culpable, and it also delivers visit from a government represenpainful awakening to the questions with methodical and tative who orders them to painstaking clarity, its deliver tons of millet at a "[FINZAN] DEALS WITH EXCISION AS AN OPPRESSIVE message of women's low, fIXed price for governrights. ment storage. The villagPRACTICE, BUT I WOULDN'T WANT IT TO BE KNOWN AS A FILM Political involvement ers join together to resist, is in Sissoko's family led by the chief. (He ABOUT EXCISION. I MADE IT GENERALLY AS A FILM ABOUT history; one of his forces the French-speakmother's brothers was a WOMEN'S RIGHTS AND STRUGGLE FOR FREEDOM." ing official to negotiate famous anticolonial with him in Bambara, in a B 4 T activist who went on to support a pan-West African federation and was eventually jailed after a Western-inspired coup d' etat in 1968. Sissoko, born in 1945, received his higher education in Paris, having attended both the Ecole des Hautes Etudes-Sciences Sociales and the French national film school. He returned to work in Mali, where he has worked as the head of a Malian government agency producing documentaries and newsreels. He recently helped found a small filmmakers' cooperative, KORA films. Sissoko belongs to the Mandingo culture, which encompasses Bambara,. Dogon and other cultures. Finwn was made about Bambara culture in the Bambara language, the dominant language of Mali. Pat Aufderheide spoke with Sissoko in Washington, D.C., where he attended packed screenings of his latest film for Filmfest D.C. Translator Pat Belcher kindly assisted in the conversation. Black Film Review: Finzan, like your earlier work, raises controversial issues. Cheikh Oumar Sissoko: Yes, Finzan forms part of a series of films I have made about social issues in Mali and Mrica. The first, of which I am very proud, is a 35minute documentary called Rural Exodus, about the tragedy of the peasant during the drought. It was made in 1984 during the severe Sahel drought. The second is Nyamanton (Garbage Boys), about the tragedy of children. And now Finzan is about women. It deals with excision as an oppressive practice, but I wouldn't want it to be known as a film about excision. I made it generally as a fIlm about women's rights and struggle for freedom. I wanted to show that their need for emancipation was necessary for social progress, that it was a struggle both for men and women. BFR: What does the title mean? Sissoko: "Finzan" is a Bambara term for a dance performed by men who have done exceptional deeds; I have extended the term to women struggling for their freedom. As a French title announces at the beginning of the fum, women do two-thirds of the world's work, get a tenth of the reward and own only 1 percent of the property. .BFR: How were you able to make the film? Sissoko: It cost $350,000, and was funded in several ways. Some Malian private investors put in money, and the government provided in-kind contributions with technicians and material. The German 1V channel, ZDF, also put in some money, as did the French Ministry of Cooperation. Finally, we managed a pre-sale to an Italian educational firm. There are no professional actors in the film, but some semi-professional-nobody works full-time as an actor in Mali. I drew some cilent from the national theater company. The woman who plays Nanyuma played the mother in Garbage BoyS; this is her third fum. And the village chief has been in six or eight films; he played the king in Yeelen. BFR: Did you have any difficulties in getting your film approved in M~Ii? Sissoko: I had to submit the film both in script form and in fmal form to Malian government censorship. This is true throughout Mrica; there is no liberty of expression. But I didn't have any real trouble. With Garbage Boys I didn't send them the real script the first time, and that caused problems. But this time I submitted the script we used. They approved it, too. In final form, they asked for some small changes, which I didn't accept. For instance, they wanted me to cut the part about the administration demanding millet at a fIXed price. I argued that there already was a public debate about the policy and that my fum wouldn't raise issues that weren't already in the air. Finally they accepted my argument. BFR: Why did you decide to focus on women's rights? Sissoko: When I was studying in Paris in the '70s, the women's rights movement was very large and made an impression on me. But I think this is very much an issue that belongs to the whole world. The Third World has its specific problems; women are even more exploited than they are in industrialized countries. Some people say that women's rights is a First World luxury, but they are the conservatives who want to maintain the status quo. I certainly wasn't the first person to raise these issues of women's rights in West Mrica. There have been conferences and discussions by sociologists, historians and many other people. So the issues weren't unfamiliar. Still, no one expected to see a film on the subject, especially [one] touching on excision. It's one thing to have a conference among intellectuals and it's another to make a movie about it. BFR: There are very funny moments in the film and moments of low, scatalogical humor. Sissoko: This is all part of a tradition of popular village theater called Koteba. It's raucous and can be satiric. It's performed for free in village squares, and it's a forum for young people to raise social problems. It's a very old Bambara tradition. The part where the two kids play tricks on Bala comes . directly from there, as does the character of Bala himself. BFR: You've combined several styles, it seems to me; the film has tragic as well as comic elements and also a didactic element. Sissoko: I tried this in Garbage Boys, too. It's a reflection of my choice to lure people into the theater in order to hear my message. I also base my decisions on a fidelity to our oral traditions. I'm interested in people coming continued on page 30 5 Mo' Better Blues pike Lee's fourth feature film, Mo' Better Blues, starring Academy award-winner Denzel Washington, explores the complex, competitive and colorful world ofjazz musicians. Unlike other jazz movies of recent years (Round Midnight, Bird, Let's Get Lost), Mo' Better stays away from the "Hollywood" version of the jazz musician: a lonely, tortured, drugcrazed artist who spends his life playing to an unappreciative audience in a dingy nightclub. Instead, the movie presents the African American improvising artist as a multi-faceted craftsman. As Lee explained during a recent press conference, "I felt that we should do a contemporary look at jazz. What we ~ed to do was show a jazz musician [who] wasn't ajunkie or an alcoholic but was an adult. Ifyou look at Round Midnight, the guy (played by the late saxophonist Dexter Gordon) was like a little child." Set in New York, Mo' Better is the story of Bleek Gilliam (Denzel Washington), a brilliant trumpeter whose passion for his music cuts him off from almost everyone around him-most notably, his band members and the two women who love him: Indigo (Joie Lee), a schoolteac11er, and Clarke Betancourt (Cynda Williams), an aspiring singer. Ironically, the one person Bleek isn't cut off from is his life-long friend but incompetent manager, Giant (Spike Lee), who ultimately destroys him. continued on page 10 6 Bleek Gilliam (Denzel Washington) is managed by his best friend, Giant (Spike Lee). By Eugene Holley, Jr. - Photos by David Lee 7 Mo' Better Blues III~ ~I knew it was pointless. Still, when Bleek (Denzel Washington) showed up at Indigo's Uoie Lee) I sat there hoping that another lllan would lean over the banister. "Honey, who's at the door?" he would say. But no, this is Spike's world, where WOlllen (except for Nola), typically wait on and for lllen. So, after an obligatory scolding-he ignored her phone calls and the letters for over a year:-Indigo allows herself to get carried away, legs in the air, by her knight. So, despite the richly rolllanced celluloid, Mo Better Blues is a Spike Lee joint after all. And while it is refreshing to see "Black love" onscreen, Lee's depiction is insincere. The relationship between Indigo Uoie Lee) and Bleek (Denzel Washington), in particular, lacks personality and rolllance. The only selllblance of chelllistry between the p~ir appears late in a brief and lllisplaced scene in which they discuss first loves. Clarke (Cynda Willi~ms), Bleek's other love interest, is fairly con- vincing as a seductress though she does not even feign affection for Bleek or his rival, Shadow (Wesley Snipes). She lllerely "lllO' betters" one or the other sufficiently to facilitate her career. To be fair, the WOlllen in Mo Better, though still peripheral characters, are lllore life-like than the WOlllen in School Daze or Do The Right Thing. They have jobs, hOllles and aspirations, not just nubile continued on page 11 8 Photos by DavidLee Sleek Gilliam (Denzel Washington) enjoys a passionate love affair with aspiring singer Clarke Betancourt (Cynda Williams). THE MUSIC continued from page 6 "proper attitude for the music." A far cry from last year's Do the Right Thing, Lee Wesley Snipes, who portrays Shadow Henderson, uses music, camera angles, dialogue, lighting, and Bleek's tenor saxophonist and rival, was gre\atly color in this film much in the same way that a jazz influenced by Thelonius Monk. "The archetype for musician spontaneously arranges harmony, rhythm, me is Monk. I can relate to Monk totally. As an and melody to create the completed composition. actor, I was inspired by all of the tapes I saw of him, More ofa quilt than a narrative, Mo' Better makes up listening to his music, and by how he perceived art for its loosely constructed plot and faulty dialogue and music. I immediately had a connection to it. In with explosions of fertile color, texture and sound. a roundabout way, I'm Monkesquewith my acting. Lee says he decided to work I'll do something out of the on the film after he saw Bird, clear blue sky not knowing Clint Eastwood's 1988 film whether it's going to work or about legendary jazz saxophonnot. And that's the way Monk ist Charlie Parker. "It was such a was." dark film, it was raining in every In addition to Washington scene, it really didn't speak of a and Snipes, Bill Nunn and true Mrican-American exisGiancarlo Esposito play bassist tence. For me, it was just too Bottom-Hammer and pianist bleak." Left- Hand Lacey, respectively. The fictitious quintet also In his last performance, the late Robin Harris, to whom the features jazz drummer Jeff film is dedicated, provides Mo' Watts (formerly with Wynton Better's comic relief in the role Marsalis and currently with of Butterbean, the MC for the brother Branford) as "Rhythm" jazz club Beneath The UnderJones in his first acting role. dog (which, incidently, was the Originally scheduled as a contitle ofjazz bassist Charles sultant, Watts was given the Mingus' autobiography). acting assignment because of The set's technical advisors the difficulty of duplicating the included bassist Michael Flemcomplex rhythmic patterns ing, who played in Bill Lee's necessary for a believable perNew York Bass Violin Choir, formance. saxophonist Donald Harrison In addition to commanding Giancarlo Esposito stars as and trumpeter Terence Blanperformances and Ernest Dickpianist Left Hand Lacey. chard. Blanchard, formerly of erson's always brilliant cinemathe Harrison-Blanchard quintet tography, the movie features (with Donald Harrison) and Art Blakey'sJazz Mesexceptional music writterl and performed by sengers, worked as Washington's coach throughout Branford Marsalis and his Quartet featuring Terthe shooting of the movie. "I worked on him getting ence Blanchard. Bassist Bill Lee wrote the original his embouchure (the correct placement of the lip and score. Also featured in Mo' Better is the music of tongue to the mouthpiece) and gave him tapes of Miles Davis ("All Blues"), Wayne Shorter ("Footthe actual music he was playing. I wanted get him to prints"), Cannonball Adderly ("Mercy, Mercy, a level to where he could actually play the melodies Mercy"), andJohn Coltrane ("A Love Supreme"). of the tunes in the movie," Blanchard said. "Denzel Although this film will probably not do as well as went beyond my expectations and his own. When Do The Right Thing at the box office, Mo' Better Blues you see the movie, you'll see Denzel playing the should attract young Spike Lee fans who may have notes." had little or no exposure to jazz and inspire them In addition to teachto check out Monk, ing Washington the Miles, Coltrane, and technical aspects of the rest of the giants. trumpet playing, BlanIf Mo' Better pulls this chard also had him off, it will have done studyJohn Coltrane, more for jazz than Miles Davis, Ornette any movie before it.• Coleman, and TheloEugene Holley, Jr. is the assisnius Monk through tan t director of the National Jazz SeIViceOrganizationinWashtheir music and videington, DC. He is a contributor otaped live performtoJazz Timesand Tower Record's ances to develop the Pulse magazine. "More of aquiD than anarrative, Mo' 'ene, lUakes up lor its loosely constructed plot and faulty dialogue with explosions of fertile color, teare, and sound." 10 ' THE MAN continued from page 8 bodies. And at least, Lee resisted the temptation to turn the nightclub scene where the two women appear in identical, Bleek-bought, red dresses into a cat fight. Though such a turn of events would have been consistent with the film's machismo subtext, we would have been deprived of Bleek's smooth-talking his way out of the dilemma so successfully that we don't even know who ended up going home with him. Mter Bleek's musical and, apparently, mental demise, both women do get what they wantClarke gets a steady gig, and Indigo gets the guybut both on someone else's terms. Clarke, though she seems offended by Bleek's inference during pillow talk that she wants him to launch her singing career, doesn't find success as a songstress until after she beds the new bandleader. And, Indigo only merits Bleek's singular affe<;tion after he's flopped onstage. Lee has said that Mo Better is a film about relationships, but the only relationship in this film that has any depth is the one between Bleek and his ego. Although the conclusion of Mo Better implies that wife and home are the ultimate panacea, we aren't convinced. The women that Bleek sleeps with, like the boys in his band, are merely the landscape for the glorification of Bleek' s "dick thing." Lee does capture the myopia of the self-absorbed artist and his inevitable alienation but fails to capture our sympathy.• Lett Proctor is a Washington, DC-based writer and editor. Denzel Washington (Sleek Gilliam) and Joie Lee (Indigo Downes). 11 .. by Kalamu ya Salaam s~ pike Lee says he really loves ally lackluster until the conclusion of the movie and appreciates jazz music. beginning with a Branford Marsalis treatment of If that's true then why didn't Ornette Coleman's "Lonely Woman" and ending ~. . he spend some time getting to with extended selections ofJohn Coltrane's know jazz before he made Mo' Better recordings. Only two soundtrack numbers are Blues? Lee's failure to deal with the details of jazz standouts. One is "Top Pop 40," a parody of popuin this film mirrors a problem that many of us lar music; the other is a brief burnout number, have: we think that because we are Black and love "Knocked Out the Box." "Top Pop 40," is excelour culture then ipso facto we know our culture, lently rendered, but it's not ajazz number. It's a and, unfortunately, show tune complete with "mugging" from that's just not the case. the band members. The key failure here The second excellent is that Mo' Better Blues number is a trumpet does not really deal with jazz from either a solo which aptly accentechnical, artistic or tuates the off-stage business standpoint. action of Giant, the We never hear the cats trumpeter's inept mansay a word about their ager, getting his ass music except for whipped in the back Shadow (Wesley alley-except at this Snipes), the tenor point Bleek doesn't. saxophonist, saying that know that his boy is he wants to make his getting beat up. So music more accessible why is this trumpeter, to a broad audience, who up to this point yet the imagery and the plays in a cool style, playing in the film suddenly coming on make it clear that with a lusty, screaming Shadow is actually the solo like he was audistrongest voice on the tioning for Albert bandstand. Ayler (a tenor saxoIt's Shadow who is phonists who played hounded by Bleek "free" jazz in the (Denzel Washington) extreme upper register and Giant (Spike Lee) of his horn)? for taking long, long Yes, the music works tenor solos (which is as music. And, yes, it's technically on target as hardly what someone a counterpoint to the who is trying to become ,alley action, but the popular with the masses Wesley Snipes stars as ambitious saxophonist would be doing). It's scene defies logic. Shadow Henderson Shadow who reaches Spike Lee, here, as in back in the tradition to revive a W.C. Handy song. so many other places in this movie full of plot So, on the one hand, while the script says Shadow holes, does not even suggest what's going on. wants to sellout and go the pop route, the action There are many other examples of the film's of the film shows it is Bleek, the oseriouso one, musical shortcomings, but they all point back to who writes and clowns his way through "Pop Top either an inability to figure out how to or a refusal 40." It's Shadow who upholds the integrity of the to rely on the music in a film that is suppose to be mUSIC. geared toward uplifting jazz. Even the soundtrack of Mo' Better Blues is generFurthermore,jazz as an art form is never dis- 12 Photos by David Lee cussed. The history raise families beofjazz is never even cause their music alluded to, and the gets in the way. The major musicians of absurdity of all of this is that most of Jazz are never so the musicians who much as mentioned as influential forces actually play the music heard in the and role models in the lives of the "Mo film, Terence Better" musicians. Blanchard and Neither the music Branford Marsalis, presented in the film in particular, are Bill Nunn stars as bassist Bonom Hammer nor any of the scenes family men. They dealing with the art or business of the music offer are the same age as those portrayed in the film, the viewer any insight into jazz. In fact, people but rather than basing this movie on the real lives who go to see Mo' Better Blues will not only leave of real musicians Lee concocts images that are not the movie unenlightened about jazz, they will consistent with reality. actually have been subjected to some major misIt's time for Spike Lee to expand h-is vision, and conceptions about it. In this regard, oMo' Bettero it's tim~ for him to employ talented Black writers is not even a noble failure. who ca~ produce scripts which reveal both the Rather than show the musicians discussing their beauty and the complexity of our lives and culture views on the major issues facing jazz musicians rather than scripts like this one that limp along_~n today, Lee resorts to presenting Bleek as the fake hipness from cliche to cliche, generalization cliched, lonely, temperamental artist who will let to generalization. nothing get in the way of his music or else Lee The ultimate insult, however, is that the ending wastes time focusing on contrived issues such as of Mo' Better Blues is dominated by the music of an in-band feud about the piano player bringing John Coltrane. It's the ultimate insult because a woman into the dressing room. during the period that Coltrane made his strongEarly in Mo' Better Blues, Bleek claims he would est music he also reared a family and had an amazcurl up and die if he couldn't play music. At the ingly beautiful relationship with a Black woman end of the movie, he's alive and well and not who was both wife and musician. playing music. What was set up as the main conDuring this portion of the movie, lovingly photoflict of the movie ends up being a non-question graphed scenes flow across the screen, offering as does every other conflict. visual accompaniment to some of Coltrane's most By the Hollywoodish ending of the this film-the stirring playing. And what does Spike Lee do? He ex-trumpeter is now a family man (although we takes Coltrane's music and mates it with a story are never told or shown what kind of work he line that completely contradicts the example that does), married to a school teacher (in an unColtrane offered. bearably and unbelievably mainstream America Lee originally wanted to title this movie A Love wedding), and raising a son who is suppose to Supreme, the song for which Coltrane is best reremind us of the young Bleek Gilliam (through a membered, but Coltrane's widow, Alice Coltrane, concluding scene which parallels the opening would not allow it. Three cheers for Alice Colscene)-Spike Lee has totally undermined the tranel' • integrity ofjazz musicians. It's all a neat little Kalamu ya Salaam is a New Orleans-based writer, music producer and package of stylistic garbage. arts administrator who has served as the executive director of the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Foundation. The implication is that jazz musicians don't 13 How To Make Love to a Negro Without Getting Tired is a comical and noncommittallitde film. Apart from its provocative and controversial tide, the film itself rarely tantalizes, much less disturbs. In fact, if it weren't for the tide, this film would have long since been swallowed by the art house circuit and forgotten, hailed by most white critics and dismissed by most Black ones. A deliberately paced film, How to Make Love follows its protagonist "Man," a writer in exile, around in a-day-in-the-life fashion, usually forgetting to cue the audience to the fact that the film is about the genesis of a novel and its ultimate conclusion. The film also fails to convince us that it is an exploration of the process of artistic creation, excluding us from the connections between the artist's experiences and his work and leading us instead into the tricky realm of casual interracial sex. Haitian-born Dany Laferriere, the author of the book on which the film is based and coauthor (with Richard Sadler) of the screenplay, says it represents his answer to a question a white woman in Montreal once asked him. The question: What do Black men talk about when white "Tomen are not around? Scenes from How To Make Love to a Negro Without GeUing Tired from left to right: Man (Isaach De Banko/e) at his typewriter; Man and Mil BicycleUe (Nathalie Talbot); Man and Mil Literature (Roberta Bileau); Man and Bouba (Maka KoUo) in their Apartment. I cannot disagree with his assumption that the stink about the film's tide smacks of an avoidance tactic. After all, who protested The Toy, the silly Richard Pryor ve.. hicle, an equally offensive tide and a more offensive film? 'When I wrote this book and film I did not want to take an ideology," he says. "I have put myself in a position where anybody can say this guy is a sexist or a racist. But I wanted people to be honest and discuss it. I did not find that in America." The truth is How To Make Love is most problematic in the United States not because of its tide but because it deals with Black men having sex with white women, a relationship most AmericansBlack and white-are very uneasy with. Beyond the fact that most often when we've seen this particular relationship dramatized it has been in the most demeaning and base sort of way, and beyond the political issues of the cultivated alienation of Black men and Black women in the cinema, and even beyond the politics of beauty in the African American community, the fact is that the pretense of the sanctity of white womanhood, like it or not, is as much a part of American culture as the animalization and mystification of the Black man. Unlike the relationship between white men and Black women, which has been accepted as a matter of course in the brutal dynamics of slavery and colonialism and their residual systems of inequities, white women and Black men have been categorically off limits to one another, creating an aura of child-like curiosity, a fasci- nation for the forbidden. But rather than address this, most critics have howled about the offensive tide rather than the troubling and, to some, distasteful idea. More disappointing, though, are the missed opportunities of the film itself. Rather than explore the nature of Man's attraction to white women, How to Make Lave simply presents it as natural. The idea that beauty is personified in creamy flesh is never challenged. The relationship "between races, between white girls and Black boys," as Laferriere puts it, never questioned. The nameless "Man," played by sculpted, god-like Senegalese Isaach de Bankole, is a lighdy-elad (or unclad), carefree child thrown into a candy shop of white women. Rarely, do we see the depth or insight of Man, the artist, as an observer or luminary. Instead, we are subject to his silence, his ogling of white women, and his occasional pouting. Any depth in How to Make Laves characters come from Man's philosophizing Muslim sidekick, Bouba, the film's most likeable and well-rounded character. Still, Laferriere insists that this film is revolutionary because two of its three central characters are Black intellectuals--one a writer, the other a philosopher-and because its drug dealers are white. But the film is anything but revolutionary in its continuation of the stereotypes its title seeks to ridicule. Much like Keenan Wayans I'm Canna Git Yau Sucka, the film often comes dangerously close to stepping over the line between satire and reinforcement. Although Laferriere says he's generally pleased with the way his novel was translated to film. "Maybe in the movie it was not clear eIlough, but in the book it was very clear that only the reader who's reading the book knows very well that this is a writer," he admits. 'The other characters in the novel think that he's just a sex object." And, so do I.• Faculty Vacancy in Visual Media One Year Appointment School of Communication Temporary one-year non-tenure track appointment available for The American University 1990-91 as Assistant Professor of Visual Media, in the School Communication. Responsiblities: Teaching undergraduate and graduate courses in basic film/video production, basic photography, film/photo history and media studies, script writing, and studio television; student advising; assistance in facilities and equipment management; School and University service. Qualifications: M.A.; professional backgrqund and experience in appropriate areas related to teaching interests and capabilities; some technical expertise necessary; previous teaching experience preferred; evidence of production of publications interests and potential desirable. Competitive salary depending on qualifications and experience. Position subject to final budgetary approval. C#V, and three letters of recommendation should be sent to: Visual Media Search Committee School of Communication The American University 4400 Massachusetts Avenue, NW Washington, D.C. 200168017. The American University is an affirmative action/equal opportunity employer. Applications from women and minorities are particularly invited. JacquieJones is editor ofBlack Film Review. Actor Madgi Barsoum assisted the author as translator. 15 by Francoise Pfaff Born in 1946 in eastern Senegal, Moussa Bathily attended the University of Dakar where he earned a M.A. in history. He started his professional life as a teacher at the Alxloulaye Sadjii high school in Rufisque. It was around this time, in the early '70s, Cheikh Ngaido Bah was born in Senegal in 1949. In addition to his two feature-length films and three shorts, Bah has made his mark in the history of Mrican cinema as one of the founding members of L'Oeil Vert (Green Eye), an organization of filmmakers and technicians whose aim is to work together to exchange or share the technical resources and means at their disposal. This interview was conducted in Dakar, Senegal, for Black Film Review. BFR: Tell us about your forthcoming film? Cheikh Ngaido Bah: My next film will be La vie continued on page 19 Moussa Bathily (right) talks to cameraman Bara Personnages during the shooting of Des Personnages. that he became seriously involved in film criticism by writing a regular film review column for 1£ Soleil, a Senegalese daily newspaper. Later, after resigning from the school system, Bathily returned to Dakar, where he regularly attended film screenings at the Dakar Cine-elub. There he came into contact with such Senegalese filmmakers as Djibril Diop Mambety and MahamaJohnson Traore and started writing scripts. At that point Bathily became increasingly impassioned with cinema and subsequently worked as Ousmane Sembene's assistant during the fI1mingof Xaw (1974) and Ceddo (1976). Mter such on-the-job training, Bathily started shoot- _ A scene from Xew Xew, a film by Cheikh Ngaido Bah ing his own fIlms. His best known works are Tiyabu Bira --------------- continued next page Photo courtesy Moussa Bathily 16 This interview was translated from the French by Francoise Pfaff, author of The Cinema of Ousmane Sembene, A Pioneer of African Film and Twenty-Five Black African Filmmakers and professor in the Department of Romance Languages at Howard University. (1978) and 1£ Certificat d'indigence (The Certificate ojIndigence, 1981). Tiyabu Bira is a feature film about pastoral life in Bathily,s native village. 1£ Certificat do'indigence is a short fiction film which denounces the inadequacies of Dakar's health services. His latest movie, Petits bLancs au manioc et a La sauce gombo ( lVhite Folks &roed Manioc and Okra Sauce), was featured at the 1989 FESPACO (Panafrican Film Festival in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso) . Black Film Review: Bathily, what is the theme of your latest film to date? Why did you call it Petits blancs au manioc et a la sauce gombo? Moussa Bathily: I wanted to illustrate the relationship between Mrica and the West, but I wanted to do it in an ironic way. I did not want to make a didactic film with good people on the one hand and bad people on the other hand. I thought that one could tackle this fIlm in a humorous way. This explains the film's tide, which is a bit long, but which thumbs its nose at colonialism and at the myth of the cannibalistic savage. manioc et a la sauce gombo, shot in Wolof and in French, I try to be fair by refusing the type of Manichaeism currendy practiced in Mrica, and according to which all white people are exploiters. Since we are in the post~olonial era, I felt it was both timely and appropriate to depict the relationship between Mrican and Western countries with a certain amount of serenity. My film describes the tribulations of a group of French technical assistants who live in a Sahelian village. BFR: Does the film focus on the village or the technical assistants? Bathily: It focuses on both, and contains amorous interrelationships. BFR: What was your film's budget and how did you finance it? Bathily: It ended up costing about $1,350,000, which is an important amount of money for a film in Senegal. Petits blancs au manioc et a la sauce gombowas financed through my own savings and the profits from my previous movies. It was also financed by the SNPC (Societe Nouvelle de Promotion Cinematographique) of Senegal, the French Ministry of Cooperation, the European Economic Community, Channel 4 (a British television station), as well as other agencies and organizations. also related to a number of problems which occurred during the shooting? Didn't you have very heavy rains which destroyed the clay village which had been especially -built for the film? Bathily: I'll be brief on this particular point because filmmakers have a tendency to speak at length about the problems they have experienced with Mother Nature. I'lljust say that I had decided to film at a given time because people told me that it hadn't rained during this season for a hundred yearS' or more. I had my set built and shortly thereafter it rained cats and dogs for days. There is maybe some type of conflict between God and fIlmmakers because the latter think they are creators. So it seems that God forces filmmakers to be a bit more modest.... BFR: You worked as a journalist for a while, and you have also written a number of short stories. What do these stories depict? Bathily: One of my short stories is entided En circuitJenne ( Close Circuit). It's the story of heads of states BFR: Does such a myth refer to the who gather to discuss the best ways mythical and stereotypical perception to avoid coup d'etats. While they of Africa? are meeting, pyrotechnics are Bathily: Yes, in a way, but the fIlm setting up fireworks. When the frrealso confronts Mricans, Europeans, crackers are heard, the heads of and Mricanists-you know, these state believe a coup has fomented people who have very fIXed ideas against them. concerning the Mricans! Besides, I I would like to go further in am convinced that one should not BFR: Wasn't the cost of the film terms ofwriting. There is a great remain in one's corner in this difference between being a space age. We know as a fact that filmmaker and a writer. You need we generally need Apastoral scene fromTiyabu Biru a film byMoussa Bathily collaborators to foreign money make a film, and technicians to whereas writing make a film in equals solitude and Mrica. Moreover, total freedom. In it also happens fact, I like the that you get along challenge of a with people who blank sheet of are not ne<;essarily paper. I've just Black. By the same fmished a novel token, you may about a l~year-old have a very poor boy whose mother relationship with is a prostitute. The people who are boy creates an Black. artificial world In Petits blancs au continued on page 18 17 #tKJNtN 8atUrt continued from page 1 7 made of dreams. He plays with words which resound images and with images which reverberate words. BFR: Does your writing influence your film language? Is there a correlation between your two activities? Did you, like Ousmene Sembene, adapt some of your written works to the screen? Bafuily: I have done so only once with Des Personnages encombrants ("Cumbersome People", 1976), in which literary characters kill their author, whom they accuse of having betrayed them. The short story and the film are both surrealistic. I like writing, but I have always wanted to make films. My family thought filmmaking was not a serious career so I studied history and became a teacher while thinking about cinema. I began writing while waiting to be able to make films. Then, of course, when I became a filmmaker I had much less time to write. BFR: Are you presently working on a film project? Bathily: Yes, I am preparing l:4rcher Bassari ('The Bassari Bowman"). It is a feature film based on the novel by Modibo Sounkalo Keita. It tells the story of man who kills people, rich people. He does so because they sold for their advantage the golden sword that villagers had asked them to sell to get money to fight drought. There are already some people who are interested in this film: Channel 4 in England, WDR in West Germany, Canal Plus in France, as well as other television stations in Italy and elsewhere. Since my films have never been commercially shown in Mrica, I hope that l:4rcher Bassari will be shown on the screens of my country. The fUm will be shot in three languages to fit the story: French will be spoken by the bureaucrats, Wolofwill be used in urban home settings, and ~assari will be the language used for scenes taking place in the rural areas of eastern Senegal. I am planning for a 18 budget of about $850,000 and the shooting of the film should take from eight to 10 weeks. BFR: When we spoke earlier, you mentioned that you would like to go to the United States. Why? Bathily: I think that I have reached the limit of what I can presently express in Senegal. Thus I'd like to go elsewhere. Making a film in another Mrican country, however, implies getting involved in a co-production, which is not always easy. So, I have another possibility: to go to Europe or to the United States. Depending on the topic of my film I might be able to fmd a producer and technicians in Paris. Yet, to make a film in Europe would mean to illustrate a story with an Mrican content, which may be difficult for an Mrican to do objectively. The advantage with working in the United States would be dealing with a topic related to the Black community and questioning its past. BFR: And delineate its Africanity? Bathily: Right. I must tell you that I have already been to New York, which is quite an exciting city. I would like to live in New York for six months and explore it further. Moreover, I'd like very much to adapt one of Chester Himes' stories to the screen. If such a dream were to be fulfilled, I'd like to work with professional actors and shoot a true detective story BFR: In so doing you would increasingly lean toward -commercial cinema? Already Petits blancs au manioc et a la sauce gombo seems to be a step in that direction. All of this seems far from the pastoral lyricism of Tiyabu Biro ... Bathily: I think that I was very chaste when I made Tiyabu Biru. With time, one always prostitutes oneself to some extent in order to appeal to the public and be able to make other films. BFR: Could the future of Senegalese cinema be linked to a more continued on page 28 Call for Entries National Educational Film & Video Festival 21st ANNUAL COMPETITION Documentaries Dramatic Features & Shorts Animation II Classroom Programs Medical/Health II Training/Instructional Special Interest II Made-for-TV PSA's II Film & Video Art Student-made Docs & Narratives Deadline: Dec. 1, 1990 Entry Forms: NEFVF 655 - 13th Street Oakland, CA 94612 415/465/6885 (}IJi~&t continued from page 16 en spirale ("Life in a Whirlwind") based on the novel by Abasse Mbione. It narrates the life of a young man who lost his father at an early age. He was brought up by his grandmother and went to school until the age of 15. Since he did not find adequate employment, he joined the army. Mter his discharge, his grandmother and his uncle gather their meager funds and buy him an old car so that he may drive a clandestine taxi cab. By working at night, and through his passengers, the young protagonist soon gets introduced to the drug underworld. As a result he [gets involved] with several situations, and [obtains] $830,000 after his boss dies in a car accident. The drug lord is to be played by Jean-Paul Belmondo. Isaac de Bankole will play the main character. La vie en spirale will cost approximately $500,000. BFR: These actors, who are well-known in West Africa and France, should indeed facilitate the commercial success of the film! But now let us speak a bit about Senegalese cinema in general. Senegal used to be at the forefront of African filmmaking. Today, although such films as Camp de Thiaroye ("Thiaroye Camp") by Ousmane Sembene and PE ("White Folks served with Manioc and Okra Sauce") have just been released, one has the feeling that your country has lost part of its importance in terms of African cinema. How would you explain this fact? Bah: Senegalese filmmakers have been responsible for the decline of Senegalese cinema, particularly in the course of the past five years. A system by which you could get subsidies from the State has been in place for more than 20 years, which has created some sort of welfare mentality among filmmakers. This.system worked for a while, but I strongly believe that Senegalese filmmakers should mature and become more industrious because such subsidies do hot bring in profits. From 1983' to 1988, the state gave more than $3 million to Senegalese filmmakers and very few films have been produced. Modern filmmaking implies a wide distribution network. Once, I had to confront [Ousmane] Sembene after he said in a 1986 press interview that his forthcoming epic, Samori, was going to cost $10 million. He added that in the United States this type of film would cost twice as much. What we were not told then [was] that when Francis Coppola, for instance, prepares such a film he is not going to see the head of state to seek financial support. Coppola goes to see the distributor and he may tell him, "I have a film with Marlon Brando." The distributor' knows that this name will bring in money and he is interested in the film project. This is a metaphor to tell you that Senegalese filmmakers should think in terms of business, especially when a film costs millions of dollars. BFR: How could Senegalese cinema be revitalized? Bah: You have to start from scratch and adapt to the needs of the times. I maintain that one must strengthen and link five areas: promotion, production, distribution, exhibition as well as the technical infrastructures. Filmmakers should not solely depend on the State; they should obtain bank loans and become accountable, even at the risk of becoming businessmen. Whether one wants it or not, cinema is a cultural industry. BFR: We are thus, according to you, reaching another stage in the history of African cinema; in particular, if one refers to the 1982 Niamey Manifesto (Manifesto de Niamey). At that time, African filmmakers wanted to develop society through cinema and increase the sociopolitical CGnsciousness of the masses. Are we leaning more and more towards a commercial type of African cinema? Bah: I was at the Niamey meeting and a few of the things t~at were said put me to sleep whIle others made me smile. Why? Because Mrican filmmakers are behind the times in comparison with Mrican ~lmgoers.The first European film was shown here at the turn of the century, ~nd since that time we have been shown award-winning films and foreign commercial motion pictures. One cannot talk about raising people's consciousness while most of the Mrican viewers want to see commercial films. To a large extent, commercial films are the only ones able to attract wide audiences, especially now when one can see good video films at home. Nowadays Mrican filmmakers have also to think in terms of popular cinema. What Mrican filmmakers do nor talk about is the fact that they used to make films for Europe. Europe dictated what Mrican cinema should be, and Europe gave them a certain amount of money to finance some of their film projects based on scripts corresponding to European views of Mrica. A lot of scripts were written, or at least edited, at the French Ministry of Cooperation. In the old days such motion pictures reflected village life, class conflicts, or the clash between traditional mores and modern ways in Mrica; now these films deal with Mrjcan mystical beliefs as in Eby Souleymane Cisse. Mrican masses do not really feel concerned with such motion pictures. BFR: Some of Cisse's films like Finye ("The Wind") have nonethecontinued on page 28 19 Fresh Telllptress in Well Worn 'Def' by Arthur Johnson It is truly commendable that 24-year-old actor James Bond III stars in, wrote, produced and directed this all-Black-cast horror film for his own company, Bonded Filmworks. But his film, Def l7y Temptation, has a well-worn horror film plot: a demonic killer who lusts for human blood. The only twist on this old theme is that the demon is a woman in a tight dress (Cynthia Bond) and all her victims are the men she picks up at a bar, takes to her apartment for four-star sex, then kills in a variety of bloody and bloodcurdling ways. In fact, the most startling scene of the film involves the villainess sodomizing one of her conquests. Dej resembles the many "Exorcist" clones of the mid 1970s, including allBlack-cast horror favorites such as Abby and Blacula. The only thing that saves Dejfrom complete horror film cliche is its talented cast. Kadeem Hardison, from TV's "A Different World," gets to show a sensitive side and a great deal of big screen charisma. Freed from the broad comedy acting style required by sitcom TV, Hardison manages to flesh out his homeboy' character as Bond's best friend, an exseminarian turned action film star. He's both funny and touching, indicating he may have an acting future beyond the Cosby dynasty. Bill Nunn, Radio Raheem of Do the Right Thin~, provides a good deal of comic relief as a bar denizen who unsuccessfully hits on the ladies at the bar witl'} a never ending stream of outrageous pick-up lines and lies. And John Canada Terrell, the narcissistic muscleman of She's Gotta Have It, appears briefly as a bartender and victim. He appears--once again-in the nude. Bond, however, as the film's main character,lacks the star quality and charisma to carry the film and perhaps should have cast Nunn, Hardison or Terrell as the lead. Brief appearances by Freddy Left: Kadeem Hardison in Def by Temptation. Below: The Temptress (Cynthia Bond) seduces one of her victims (John Canada Terrell). . Jackson and Melba Moore add little to the film. Cinematographer Ernest Dickerson, best known for his collaborations with Spike Lee, is responsible for the film noire look of De! Still, the film's most laudable feature is the fact that it represents the tenacity of today's Black filmmakers who can accomplish the herculean task of getting a Black film into your local movie theater. The Other Side by Pat Aufderheide Mrican cinema has a sober and socially-conscious international image, and indeed its vitality has typically been linked to its social relevance. But there's another side to Mrican cinema as well, that of lighthearted, often bawdy comedy. Bal Poussiere, written, prodlIced and directed by Henri Duparc from the Ivory Coast, showcases this style. Like the Zairian-comedy La Vie Est Belle, by Ngangura Mweze, it has roots in French farce as well as showcasing folk humor and topical jokes. And like that film, Bal Poussiere raises questions about the line between fullbodied humor and offensive reinforcement of stereotypes. Bal Poussiere features the clash between city and country, and between men and women. The heroine, Binta, is a young rebel who balks at her city relatives' desire to make her into a maid and keep tabs on h,er; she wants to go to school by day and party at night. She's sent back home, where a lascivious polygamistknown locally by his nickname of Demi-Dieu (half god)-wants to add her to his five-wife collection. (The wives all disapprove.) Binta's father approves the marriage, and the flamboyant wedding shows off the husband's wealth, even though Binta has warned her husband, "I'm not a virgin." The wedding night is a comedy of one-upmanship. continued on page 22 ADifferent Worldby LettlorProctor Kadeem Hardison t's a long way from Brooklyn to Burbank, but for Kadeem Hardison, the beguiling Dwayne Wayne of NBC's "A Different World," it's been a pleasure trip. He began training as an actor at the age of 7 with Earle Hyman (Grandpa Huxtable) and then later at Weissbanen, where students' performances were videotaped and then critiqued by talent scouts. His first paying job, at the age of 14, was an ABC Afterschool Special, "The Color of Friendship", a portrait of race relations in public schools. The lead role in "The Color of Friendship" was played by James Bond, III, director this year's Del by Temptation, in which Hardison stars. Typically, work for the aspiring actor was sporadic. Hardison worked as a bike messenger in New York between auditions. His big break came three years ago in the form of Dwayne Wayne. Darrell Bell, who plays his sidekick, was up for the same part. "I was in New York, and he was in L.A. auditioning for the same part. I'd call him up and say, 'Yo, man, I got a callback on that Different World gig,' and he'd say, 'Me, too,' and this went on until I was getting ready to go to L.A. to audition for it. And I called him up and told him, and he said, 'I'll see you there.' And I'm like, hey, hold up now, he was a business major who dropped out of college to do Spike Lee's movie (School Daze) and now he's up for my part?! He .ain't paid no dues. I've been busting my chops for 11 years." When it came down to auditioning for the network, though, the competition had been eliminated. Hardison had the floor. "I went in, gave them all some dap, told a few jokes, loosened everybody up a little bit and they asked me what I'd do with the money if I got the part, and I told them I would buy a BMW-I was talking about a bike, but of course they thought, 'Little negro, soon as he starts making some money the first thing he wants to get is a fancy car.'" After two successful seasons on "A Different World," the network execs bought Hardison a BMW-a model car. By that time, though, he had already bought one motorcycle and traded it in on a second one, which he rode to LA from Las Vegas in the rain. Now, he's hoping to cut a deal with Honda to be a spokesperson. "I told tell them they could keep the money, just give me a bike!" He's planning a motorcycle trip from L.A. up the coast to· Vancouver, B.C. during the show's hiatus. When he's not biking, Hardison still remains far from the world of Hollywood's glitterati. "It's always a "Who's Who" thing when .you go out, wherever you go. I did all my partying at 18,19, 20 in New York. Now I've got everything I need at my house-a computer, Nintendo, a VCR, my comic books, my pit bull. The most I do is go to the movies on Thursday nights." As for his future in acting, Hardison remains hopeful. "I'm very satisfied with Dwayne Wayne, the way he's matured over the years, and since Debbie (Allen) took over, we have a lot more input over what the characters say and do." He enjoyed working with Keenan Ivory Wayans on I'm Gonna Git You Sucka, Spike Lee on School Daze as well as James Bond, ilion Del. But, he explains, "That wasn't like work; it was like play because these dudes let you improvise. If it works, they keep it, and if not, they don't. He hopes to work on more small budget projects in the future and has no desire to direct. In the meantime, Hardison will continue enjoying the fruits of his labor (he plans to buy a bigger bike, a "crUiser") and hopefully a long career with many credits. "When I auditioned for Performing Arts (high school) in New York, I didn't get in. Look at me now!" _ Lett Proctor is a Washington, DC-based writer and editor. 21 REVIEWS continued from page 21 This is only the first of Binta's outrages against her new husband's control, and the first of his problems in juggling his marital responsibilities to his many wives. The local great man is reduced to a figure of buffoonery by the savvy girl who won't be tamed, although along the way the other wives begin to revolt. III the process, the film maker makes the most of his lead actress' stunning physical attributes, providing close-ups of jiggling breasts and a full-screen close-up of buttocks. So even though the joke's supposedly on the powerful polygamist, Bal Poussiere also shamelessly exploits the prancing figure of the citified girl. The movie also tries hard to be a crowd-pleaser by offering raucous scenes of city entertainment, of lewd rural buffoonery and of the culture clash between city and country. Perhaps the most self-consciously responsible moment occurs in the first few seconds of the film, when a prostitute attempts to engage a tavern patron, who responds, "And what about AIDS?" This question never reappears. Bal Poussiere was a smash hit at the 1989 Ouagadougou biennial festival of Mrican cinema, and was also popular at the 1990 Filmfest D.C. Its vigorous populism clearly has mass appeal, as does its lowest-common-denominator physical humor. But many international audiences may find its exploitation of its central character to step over the line from funny to crude. There are very few Mrican women filmmakers, and so it may be a bit of a wait to see what an Mrican farce produced by a woman would look like. But it would be very interesting to find out. Without You Imagine a film with comedy and music and lots of Black folks on camera at all times featuring songs made famOllS by Nina Simone ("Four Women"), Billy Paul ("Me and Mrs. Jones") , Sylvester ("Do You Wanna Funk With Me" and "Mighty Real") and Prince ("Little Red Corvette"), plus rap music, a hot jazz combo, and references to Diana continued on page 31 Take Control of Your Future at UDC Stancey Stewart came to the University of the District of Columbia in 1981. His mind never showed up. Stancey was playing hard in the street. .. having big fun. His reward: Four "F's" and one "A". The playboy student became a statistic...another dropout. Doing back-breaking labor for small pay checks drove Stancey back to the classroom in 1984. Stancey got busy. And he put his priorities in order. He remembers: "At UDC, I learned how to learn! I learned how to apply myself to a task, how to improvise to achieve a specific goal, how not to rest on my achievements, and how to reach higher for the next goal." He learned to be a winner, not a statistic! The results: In May 1990, Senior Class President Stancey Stewart graduated, magna cum laude, with a bachelor's degree in journalism, one of about 120 undergraduate and graduate degree programs available at UDC. Pay raises and new job opportunities were offered by his employer. His self-esteem is soaring. The system is working for him now. Stancey left behind almost 12,000 other smart people at UDC who are determined to take control of their futu re, too. Join them! . 22 For additional information Call UDC-2225, or write: Office of Undergraduate Admissions, or Office of Graduate Admissions University of the District of Columbia 4200 Connecticut Avenue, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20008 -JJ1- . ac the smart choice EEO-AA OSCAR MICHEAUX KATHLEEN COLLINS SPIKE LEE EUZHAN PALCY ST CLAIR BOURNE BILL the vision. GUNN MENELIKSHABAZZ ELLEN the voice. SUMTER MICHELLE PARKERSON HENRY HAMPTON MED HONDO From L.A. to London and Martinique to Mali. We bring you the world of Black film. SOULEMAYNE CISSE YOUSSEF CHAHINE HAILE GERIMA SAUNBlack FIlm Review brings you news, reviews and in-depth interviews from the most vibrant DRA SHARP ROY CAMPANELLA, movement in contemporary film. Published quarII REGINALD HUDLIN CHARLES terly and recognized internationally, Black Film Review is the foremost chronicle of the efforts of BURNETT MEDHI CHAREF AVERY filmmakers throughout the Mrican diaspora. And Hollywood commentary as well as features on BROOKS AYOKA CHENZIRA with other filmmakers working outside the mainstream STANLEY NELSON SIDNEY POI- industry, there is always something for everyone. Subscribe today, or send $3 for a trial issue. TIER ISAAC JULIEN ROBERT You won't want to miss another one. HOOKS IDRISSA OUEDRAOGA , , Black Film Review takes up where the SARA MALDROR BILL DUKE likes of Variety and Premiere leave off because it gives me in-depth articles and JEAN-MARIE TENO ARTHUR ~SI interviews about film that's happening in BITA KATHY SANDLER NEEMA the other three quarters of the world-. the majority of the world. And as a new BARNETTE BILL FOSTER TOPproducer, it's heartening to see acelebraPER CAREW ROBERTTOWNSEND tion offilm that reflects my efforts and my perspectives. , , MAUREEN BLACKWOOD JOHN AKOMFRAH MARTINA ATILLE Gloria Naylor, Author and Independent Producer of Mama Day. ROBERT GARDNER DEBRA ROBINSON MURIEL JACKSON ~----------------I DYES! Please start my subscription WOODY KING MELVIN VAN with your next issue enclosed is $12. PEEBLES DUANE JONES GASDYES! Please send me a trial copy TON KABORE JULIE DASH enclosed is $3. BROCK PETERS DIDI PETERS Name - - - - - - - - - - YULE CAISE DONNA MUNGEN RONALD WAYNE BOONE MAR- Address - - - - - - - - - LON RIGGS BEN CALDWELL City - - - State - - Zip ---,---ZEINABU IRENE DAVIS MICHEL Clip and send this coupon with payment to KHLEFI OUSMANE SEMBENE Black Film Review, PO Box 18665 JAMES BOND III ELSIE HASS WIL- LWashington, DC 20036 LIAM GREAVES • AND MORE ~ 23 by Victoria 24 M arshall t the American Film Market [AFM] , held in Beverly Hills earlier this year, more than 800 buyers from Asia, Europe, the South Pacific, North, Central and South America met to purchase and sell the licensing, releasing, national and international distribution and exhibition of American film. Deals made at AFM, the largest commercial audio-visual entertainment market in the United States, determine access to money and international markets as well as the prospects of financial gains far down the line for a large numbe'r of American films, some of which will never be seen in the US. For the occasion, the rooms and suites of the Beverly Hills Hilton were transformed into negotiating salons, dressed ' palatially for those companies that could afford it and modestly for those that could not. At AFM, deals are made at various stages of the production process. Actress and filmmaker Rae Dawn Chong, for example, was there searching for a distributor and post-production funding to complete her film currently in production in Canada while Wendell Harris, winner of the Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance U.S. Film Festival for his first feature, Chameleon Street, was there to market a completed film. Buyers from different nations, for example Embrafilmes, the Brazilian national film promotion organization, came to see what sellers offered for theatrical release, video sales and television broadcast in their homelands. AFM newcomer JAMPRO , the Jamaican Economic Development Agency, was on hand to sell Jamaica as a technically sophisticated location site. The Black films marketed at AFM varied greatly in subject and production value as did the structure of their sales pitches. Perfume, RolandJefferson's soon to be released feature, was marketed with a highlight on former Love Boat star and filmmaker Ted Lange. Lange is featured in Perfume, the story of four middle class Black women. Def by Temptation, on the oth'er hand, was over-promoted as a film with an "all-Black cast." AFM also featured A-rated films such as Driving Miss Daisy and Milk and Honey, the story of aJamaican who travels to Canada to find work. Although Milk' and Honey, scripted by Jamaican playwright Trevor Rhone, received critical acclaim in its limited commercial release in the US, it sold poorly at AFM, according to the sales rep. Overall, the 1990 AFM essentially featured for 'sale B-rated, flashy action/ adventure films. The majority of buyers, from Japan and Europe, were looking for material to fill their rapidly developing video and TV programming industries. However, the ending of the Cold War and the uncertainty of the effect economic integration of Europe in 1992 will have on the global film industry slowed buying this year. In addition, many other companies are considering the future use of laser video, high definition television, live telesatellite links, and holographic imagery and were more cautious in their buying. Not surprisingly, there were not many Mrican-American faces to be seen-besides the added security officers and custodial crews. Eventually, though, a few Black sales representatives for the releasing companies, lawyers, bankers, producers, and journalists made appearances. Still, Mrican-Americans are poorly represented within this phase of the film ,industry. To bolster and develop distribution of their films, Black filmmakers might focus more on targeted market sales to foreign buyers. "Rebound marketing'" to intended American audiences might be.a welcomed result. According to many sales reps at AFM, buyers want access to more varied international, multicultural products, and less violent, more realistic, quality films are increasingly sought. If AFM is any indication, the new and extended European markets, including former colonies, may provide new avenues for the distribution of Black films.• Black Film Review Associate Editor Victoria Marshall is a Los Angeles-based freelance writer. She is also director of an international film promotion company, Reel World Imagery. 25 No Identity Crisis No Identity Crisis by Melvin and Mario Van Peebles New York: Fireside/Simon and Schuster Inc. 260 pp., Illus., $9.95 (paperback). by John Williams In Melvin Van Peebles' second "No Identity Crisis", the 57-year~ld maverick actor-producer-director who starred as "Sweetback" in the now-legendary Sweet Sweetback s Baadasssss Song (1971) reemerges as "Block," the tough, no-nonsense father of Mario Van Peebles' "Chip." Sectioned into two parts, the book chronicles the making of the movie Identity Crisis from its seemingly wacky genesis as a script called 'To Die For" all the way to its ultimate completion as a fatherson joint business venture. Together, as partners in the independent film production company Block and Chip, Inc., father and son confront do-or-die obstacles in the gritty world of guerilla filmmaking. Much like Spike Lee's making~f-the-film book, spike Lees Shes Cotta Have It: Inside Guerilla Filmmakin~ No Identity Crisis is a step-by-step blueprint charting the nuts and bolts of Black independent film practices from pre-production to post. Unlike spike Lees Cotta Have It (SLGHl), though, No Indentity Crisis fails to achieve the point of resolution Lee's book did with the story of the acquisition of a distributor and Shes Cotta Have Its subsequent commercial release. As of this printing, Identity Crisis still lacks a distributor. And while SLGHI, Lee's first of four books, may be considered the standard for works in this genre, Van Peebles' The making~f-the-filmbook, Making ofSweet Sweetback s 26 Baadasssss Song (1971) is the indisputable prototype preceding Lee's by almost two decades. Then, too, No Identity Crisis can be read not only as a making~f the-film book but also as the allegory of a father's and son's attempt to come to terms with one another-Melvin syQJ.bolizing the "pull-yourself-upby-the-bootstraps" generation of the '60s and Mario, the children of the post-Civil Rights Black middle No Identity Crisis co-author Melvin Van Peeble. class of the '80s. movie strip boards, and wonderful Early on, the book hints at the black-and-white stills of those father-son conflict at the root of members of the cast, family, and the film's very conception. "I had friends who contributed to and initially thought of Identity Crisis as inspired its production. a 'who-dun-it' with humorous No Identity Crisis gives invaluable characters, but emphasis on insight into the plight of two intense situations," writes Mario. 'This became an on-going point of talented artists working together as a team against the maligned iInage contention with Dad, who perof their people. It is also a testaceived it as a flat~ut, nutty-eomedy a la Ghostbusters meets ]\;farried to the ment to the dogged strength of the blood bond holding father and Mob." son together under duress and a This fundamental difference in moving account of those who opinion between father and son's nurtured it. conception of the film is never The elder Van Peebles was resolved in the film itself which recendy honored by the Metrooften bounces back and forth politan Museum of Art in New nervously between the two unsure York, a first for a Black filmmaker, of what exacdy it wants to be. with a retrospective covering more Told with wit, passion, and than three decades in his career. humor, the book features Melvin The program spanned the nowand Mario's father-son diaries, classic trilogy first screened at the illustrations of the Identity Crisis French Cinematheque-Sunlight (1958), Three Pickup Men far Herrick (1958), and A King (1958) (which was missing)-all the way to Identity Grisis (1989), written by and starring Mario. Sweetback, for which Melvin Van Peebles is best known, was shot by his one~man production company, Yeah, Inc., in 20 days in southern California with a $50,000 loan from actor-eomedian Bill Cosby and monies earned from Van Peebles' first Hollywood feature, Watermelon Man (1969). The film triggered a wave of cheap Hollywood imitations known as the "blaxploitation" films as it soared on to become one of the highestgrossing Black films in history. Melvin Van Peebles was born in Chicago in 1932. Mter graduating from Ohio Weslyan and serving in the military as an Air Force navigator, he moved to San Francisco where he published a photo essay about the city's cable cars, The Big Heart (1957) . Mter finding the Hollywood fIlm industry closed to Black directors, he left California for Europe where, among other things, he did graduate studies in astronomy, toured with a Dutch repertory theater company, and worked as a journalist. He fmally setded in Paris in the '60s. In 1967, Van Peebles was catapulted into fame when his first feature fum, La Permission("Story of a Three-Day Pass"), premiered at the San Francisco Film Festival. As a protest against the racist American film industry, he attended the festival as a French delegate. The fIlm's success brought Van Peebles to the attention of Columbia Pictures for which he scripted Watermelon Man (1969), his only film to be distributed by a major studio. In addition to being an accomplished fIlmmaker, Melvin Van Peebles' accolades include 11 books, four television specials, three Broadway and two off-Broadway Tony award-winning plays, and numerous recordings and music videos.• John Williams is a writer, editor, and critic who writes for Black Film Review and the Independent. ;t(tKJ4Itb 84 ~~8ai ontinued from page 1 9 continued from page 18 commercial type of filmmaking that would be more flourishing because it would generate profits? Bathily: First of all, Senegalese films should be actively distributed throughout the world because releasing a fIlm solely in Mrica does not payoff. In Senegal the fIlmmaker gets 25 percent of the profits. You are told that 50 percent of the profits go to the city. So, the 50 percent that is left is shared between producer and the filmmaker. This is not a viable system! We should aim at the international fIlm market, which means that we should follow widely accepted norms. If we are not able to hire famous actors, we should at least illustrate popular and universal themes which may appeal to international audiences. I don't see. any problem in doing that. If fIlmmakers want to convey a particular message, they can still do so within these criteria.• J Black-owned independent production company seeking potential executive producer for low-budget feature film presently in development stage. Please contact: Anthony ThoDlpson JUMP AT DE SUN FILMS, INC. 180 Troy Avenue Apt.4J Brooklyn, NY 11213 (718)735-8424 28 less been greatly appreciated by audiences in West Africa. Bah: Yes, because Finye appealed to youth, and the same thing was true of his motion picture, Baara. Yet I was disappointed by Yeelen. This film wa~ well done with beautiful images; however, today one can have beautiful images as well as a strong and meaningful content. Not everybody favors the making of detective or action films, yet I do believe that these types of films can serve to instigate the making of others. In Africa we have a wealth of unexplored themes related to our societies and cultures. BFR: Could you briefly talk about your past, and especially about your training as a filmmaker? Bah: I was born near the religious city of Tivaouane. In. 1968 I went to Dakar to go to college, but I ended up not registering. I stopped at the French Cultural Center, where I received some training in film. Later, I worked for Senegalese television and I was sent to Paris for further practical training at INA [Institut National de I' Audiovisuel]. I subsequently came back to Dakar where I produced television programs. It was at that time that I shot La Brosse ("The Brush"), which was followed by Arret Car ("Bus Station") . Both shorts were made in 1973. La Brosse depicts one day in the life of a young shoe-shiner in Dakar. Arret Car is a film on bus conductors in that same city. BFR: And then what did you do? Bah: In 1975, while working, I made a medium-length film, entitled Tabio Feraay~ In 1976 I resigned from Senegalese television and, two years later, I shot my first film called Rewo Dande Mayo ("The Other Side of the River"). Tablo Feraay is the name of the shanty-town which houses people who were forced out of a section of Medina where buildings were to be erected. My film tells the story of a young girl born in Medina, who grew up in Tablo Feraay and carne back to her former neighborhood to work as a maid for a young Senegalese couple currently residing in the new buildings. BFR: What about Rewa Dande Mayo? Bah: This film was primarily meant to be a documentary. So I went on location to Mauritania, to the other side of the Senegal river. I stayed there for three months with a friend of mine who is an agronomist. There, I realized that I could make a feature film. Rewo Dande Mayo depicts a very old village whose life is disrupted because shepherds have to become farmers after a water system is put in place to create and irrigate rice fields. One shepherd cannot cope with such a change and wants to leave his village. He eventually dies before the irrigation system is completed. BFR: How much Rewa Oande Mayo cost? Bah: About $68,000 at the time: $15,000 carne from my personal funds, $34,000 was provided by a Mauritanian development company, and $17,000 was obtained through the advanced selling of the noncommercial rights of the film. Belgian television and the Senegalese Film Fund [Le Fonds D'Aide pour L'lndustrie Cinematographique] also provided some money to make the film. Later on, the French Ministry of Cooperation bought the motion picture. BFR: Did Rewa Dande Mayo generate any profits? Bah: Yes, some very limited profits which barely allowed me to start my second feature film entitled Xew Xew ("Celebration Begins"). Then, I had to discontinue the shooting of the film for six months. I was subsequently able to continue and finish the film thanks to a distribution advance of some $10,000 provided by SIDEC (Societe d'lmportation, de Distribution et d'Exploitation Cinematographique) and an equal amount of money given to me by CIDC (Consortium Interafricain de Distribution Cinematographique). Xew Xew's total budget amounted to $136,000. Xew Xew was released in 1982, and well-known Senegalese musicians as Ie Xalam and Youssou N'Dour performed in it. ate future of Senegalese cinema? become very successful. In the end, Xady's parents make up with their daughter. BFR: You are not making films as often as you would like. How do you earn a living between two feature films? Bah: Between two feature films, I try to shoot documentaries and films on development. Recently, the European Economic Community commissioned a series of films on trade and agricultural projects in Senegal. Now I'd like to make a documentary on Japanese products in Senegal. All of this is not very creative but it allows me to survive economically. BFR: What is Xew Xew's story? Bah: It is a film about Senegalese music, whose growth I have been witnessing for 10 years. I have a lot of friends who are musicians. I used to spend a great deal of time with them, and I saw what they went through. The kids had patchedup guitars but they stuck to their music, and there was a lot of action. They were really setting a good exampIe for me as a filmmaker. Of course, making a film or staging a play costs more than composing and playing music. Yet, I said to myself that Senegalese music, of which we are proud, could serve as an example to the development of other artistic fields. BFR: Could you further elaborate on the plot of this film? Bah: It is the story of several musicians and also that of Xady, a young sociologist who belongs to the Senegalese bourgeoisie. This young woman falls in love with one of the musicians, which causes her to be rejected by her family. Therefore, Xady goes to live with the musicians and has a child. In order to support her child and financially help the musicians, the young woman works as a sociologist. In the meantime, the musicians work very hard and BFR: Would you like to add anything concerning the immedi- Bah: I am optimistic about it but I think that some of the people belonging to the old guard of Senegalese filmmakers should step down and give us a chance. They are hurting a whole generation of filmmakers. And what saddens me most is that countries such as Mali and Burkina Faso, which have even more limited economic means, are making more films. Of course, it may be said that Malian and Burkinabe filmmakers get state support and that they are making the same errors we did 10 or 15 years ago. Yet, although their errors may be identical to ours, they may be able to find different solutions. • m RODD CTIO 1\1 II"P ART for B 1 a c k and N L a tin E 0 R I mag e 5'13 S, 17 East 17th Street, 7th Floor New York, NY 10003 (212) 675-3000 (212) 675-3275 FAX Inc. Join us if you ... I WATCH MOVIES MAKE MOVIES (or want to~ INVEST IN MOVIES (or want to~ We are a not-for-profit group that helps film and video makers through low cost production equipment rental, consulting services and investor searches. With our help, more and better films by and about Black and Latino people can be presented to eager audiences. Call us to join or to contribute to our Production Fund! 29 CHEIKH 0 MAR SISSOKO continued from page 5 to the theater to see social problems. And those problems frequentlyare dramatic. People don't want to come to the theater to get depressed and weep. The way to bring them in is to have them see the problems through a story that engages them. BFR: What has been the reaction in Mali? Sissoko: It's been shown so far only in large towns, and I've been at the showings to see how it's received by the people because I care-I made it primarily for them, although I am also interested in international reaction. Reactions have been very positive; people have come in great numbers. It was released in December 1989, and before the beginning of Ramadan in March 'it had drawn in 84,000 spectators. More women than men come to see the film. And when I walk down the street women stop to congratulate me. They often say they're happy because a man finally sees their point of view, although I don't think I'm the only one. But it is true that so far this is the only Mrican-made feature film whose subject is the rights of women. There is another film from Burkina Faso called My Daughter tVill Not Be Excised dealing only with excision; I didn't want to restrict my film to this one subject, but to address the rights of women generally. Still, people have criticized the film saying that there are many other women's problems it does not cover. For instance, it doesn't get into religious oppression of women in Islam or the heavy unequal burden of daily work falling on women. You cannot do everything. But I did consciously design the film so that, no matter what is going on in the foreground, the frame is filled with women carrying wood, preparing food, hauling water-eonstantly at work. 0 BFR: The mother has a very tender relationship with her son. 30 Sissoko: The son is the mother's greatest support; he must defend her and take charge. This is part of Bambara tradition. The daughter will move away to another family but the son will remain and always keep his mother at his side. The mother is sacred. But in each generation, the young come up with a different attitude toward women, and this young man supports the liberation of women. I created this character to show hope in the next generation. BFR: The"crisis of Fili exposes contradictions within tradition. Sissoko: Yes, particularly in the character of her father. He has moved to the city after the death of his wife in childbirth. He is afraid his daughter as well will hemorrhage if she is excised, so he moves away from that tradition. But the city has its own dangersmany children of migrants become petty criminals and prostitutes. So he sends her back to the village with Nanyuma when he rejects Nanyuma's bid for support. I wanted to show the bad and the good of the city-it poses problems of alienation but it can also free one from tradition. Also, you see that Fili's father is very traditional yet can also break with tradition. BFR: Your editing style and camera work seem consciously to avoid that psychological intimacy that marks many Western entertainment films. Sissoko: The narrative style is part of the oral tradition. I wanted to conform to those traditions. I edited the film with an Mrican, in Burkina Faso. Mali has no postproduction equipment. I took three assistants from Mali as well, to train them. We took five months to edit, and we discussed the montage at every step. We talked especially about maintaining the spirit of oral tradition. For instance, in the meeting between the commissaire and the chief, a European film would handle that interchange quickly. We wanted to include the body stances, the gestures, all of which are also part of the dialogue. I avoided close-ups and a tight focus generally. I know American films do this, and I see it as a technique to ·idealize the individual. My intention was to show that people are never isolated. I didn't want to emphasize individuality. It's not one person but the group effort that influences events. I tried to give my characters individuality as well; Nanyuma is the most typical example. I wanted to show her sentiments, but I wanted to integrate that into her social reality. It was important for me to know that the people come to an awareness of the need for group action. When they resist the government demand for a forced sale of millet, the men and women band together to resist in an organized way, and it works. They won a victory, and that's the road to resolve problems. This is the departure for liberation. At the start Nanyuma is isolated and people even organize against her. Some women come to unite with Nanyuma, although some women also oppress Fili. At the end she leaves the village, but she leaves with a man, her son. It shows that men and women together will solve the problem, that the problem of women is the problem ofsociety. • Pat Aufderheide is an assistant professor in the School of Communications at The American University and a senior editor ofIn These Times newspaper. . Market your fillll services and products to our readership by advertising in the next Black film Review for lJ10re i JlforlJlrltioll COIl trlct; Sheila Reid, Ad1.JertisiJlg Director 2(}2-466-2753 REVIEWS continued from page 22 her singing or her comedy-the announcer even mispronounces her name. Early in the film, her manager explains that she booked Bernhard in this club because Bernhard's ego had ballooned so much after her Broadway success and that to play before such a cold audience would bring her down a peg or two. Bernhard takes no notice of the audience's ennui, however, and performs at full throttle throughout. Only Bernhard's boldness of concept and her supreme selfconfidence could Qave prompted her to make a film in which she is not the adored center. How many performers would dare portray themselves as a flop in their own film? Fortunately for Bernhard, her atypical, off center satire is too strong to be threatened by this less than complimentary presentation of her talent. The other risk Bernhard has taken here is to fill the film to the brim with references to Black music and culture. Clearly Ross, Tina Turner, Nikki Giovanni, Amiri Baraka, Vanity Martin Luther King, the blues, Mingus and scat singing with a score by Patrice Rushen. To top it all off, imagine beautiful Black actress Cynthia Bailey haunting the film with mute, sporadic appearances. This sums up about 50 percent of the film Without You I'm Nothing. The other 50 percent is the inimitable and fresh presence of comedienne Sandra Bernhard. Without You is the film adaption of Bernhard's hit one-woman Broadway show of a few years back. But instead of going the usual Broadway act-to-film route of actually filming a stage performance and interspersed with shots of the audience laughing uproariously at her, Bernhard has chosen a more daring concept. Though she is white and Jewish and a New Yorker, her concert film within a film is performed before a visibly bored and indifferent Black audience in a nightclub in Los Angeles. The audience never applauds The editors wish to acknowledge the following donors for their generous contributions: Atlanta Mrican Film Society ~ Elizabeth Alexander ~ Anonymous ~ Mauree Ayton ~ Neema Barnette ~ A~Lelia Bundles ~ Roy Campenella~ II ~ Elden Cave ~ Mhye Cham ~ Joel Chaseman ~ Herbert v. Colley~ Jr. ~ Robert H. Devine ~ Lewis Erskine ~ Kay Ferguson ~ Richard and Phyllis Ferguson ~ Bryan Fortson ~ Charles Fuller ~ Dr. Naomi M. Garrett ~ Henry Louis Gates ~ Mahle J. Haddock ~ Robert S. Hainey ~ Judi Hetrick ~ Elizabeth Jackson ~ Charles F. Johnson ~ Charles E. Jones ~ Humphrey C. Jones ~ Humphrey C. Jones~ Jr. ~ Charles Larson ~ James Alan McPherson ~ Ethel S. Meeds ~ Rodney Mitchell ~ James A. Miller ~ Spencer Moon ~ Gloria Naylor ~ Michelle Parkerson ~ Annell Primm~ MD ~ Diane Porter ~ On The Potomac Productions ~ Elaine Pounds ~ PRN Music Corp. ~ Richard L. Rivard ~ Trodville Roach ~ Roger B. Rosenbaum ~ Charles Scattergood ~ Charles Sessoms ~ C.C. Still ~ Julia Sweig ~ Piankhi Tanwetamani ~ Gina Ferguson Thomas ~ Eve A. Thompson ~ Robert Townsend ~ Josephine S. Wade ~ Dr. Leroy Wells ~ Winnie Williams ~ Marti Wilson ~ Paula Wright ~ Joyce Payne Yette ~ All donations to Sojourner Productions, publishers of Black Film Review, are tax-deductible to the fullest extent allowable by law. she is committing box office suicide by failing to ground her film in middle-class white culture. And Black audiences are probably unfamiliar with her except for appearances on "The Arsenio Hall Show." Even so, many Black moviegoers will probably fail to recognize the name Nina Simone as well as her famous '60s protest song, "Four Women." When Bernhard dressed in Mrican garb and sang the song's first line, "My skin is Black... " the predominately white audience of the screening I attended laughed. But clearly Bernhard's intent is more political than comic as she sings the song in its entirety (to a bumpin' accompaniment by the on-stage jazz combo). Is she lampooning the persona of a self-deluded star desperately trying to reach her onscreen Black audience or is she grabbing the attention of her yuppie white film audience? Is she commenting on a white-dominated society that so routinely rips off Black culture only to throw it back at the Black people that originated it? If so, no wonder the onscreen audience is so bored. Cynthia Bailey provides the final commentary, giving the silent crowd the last word on all that has gone before. Finally, Bernhard's politicssexual, social, and racial-seem to be the whole point of Without You. And, that's quite an agenda for an American comic in an era when crotch and bathroom humor have become comedy norms, while racism, sexism, and homophobia are reaping big bucks for comedians who have nothing else on their minds.• AJ. Black Film Review Associate Editor/Film Critic Arthur Johnson is a published fiction writer and a produced playwright. Pat Aufderheide is an assistant professor in the School ofCommunication at The American University and a senior editor of In These Times newspaper and an Associate Editor of Black Film Review. 31 September SEPTEMBER 21 THROUGH OCTOBER 21The wealth and diversity of video being made by artists living in Brooklyn will be examined in The Brooklyn Museum's six-week series 'Working in Brooklyn/Video." Introduced by video artists and ," followed by discussion, these thematic programs include tapes that express personal and political points of view while experimentirlg with the capabilities of the video medium. All programs are offered at 2 p.m. in the Museum's Education Division located on the first floor and are free with Museum admission. Sept. 16 - Image, Music, Text;Jem Cohen, guest speaker Sept. 23 - Media = POUJer, Ardele Lister, guest speaker Sept. 30 - tvhat is a Good Woman? Kathryn High, guest speaker Oct. 7 - Personal Visions; Kristine Diekman, guest speaker Oct. 14 - New Histaries; Rea Tajiri, guest speaker Oct. 21 - The Next Generation; Thomas Harris, guest speaker J 929 Harrison Ave., Suite 104 Columbus, OH (614) 299-5355 SATURDAYS, SEPTEMBER 29 THROUGH DECEMBER 15 The Black Heritage Film/Video Festival: poets, writers and performers. Also a special tribute to Bill Gunn (1931-1989). The Landlord; Script by Bill Gunn. Directed by Hal Ashby. Personal Problems; Directed by Bill Gunn. Blacks and Jews; Produced and directed by Ishmael Reed. Silver and Gold; (Zimbabwe) Miriam Patanza. 1989 The People's Poet (UK/South Mrica) Mravision 1989. Avenue Louis Messiah Ishmael Reed, Sonya Sanchez, Clayton Riley, Louis Massiah and others will be among the guest presenters. FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT: FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT: Dara Meyers-Kingsley Coordinator of Film and Video Programs Public Programs and Media The Brooklyn Museum 200 Eastern Parkway Brooklyn, NY 11238 (718) 638-5000, ext. 234 Rodney Lee Langston Hughes Community Library and Cultural Center 102-09 Northern Boulevard Corona, New York 11368 (718)651-7116 FAX (718)651-6258 SEPTEMBER 21 The Atlanta Mrican Film Society will screen the film Garbage Bays. Directed by Malian filmmaker Cheikh Oumar Sissoko. At the Georgia Pacific Center Auditorium, 1333 Peachtree Street, NE, Atlanta, GA 30348. FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT: Monica Freeman Program Coordinator The Atlanta Mrican Film Society (404)525-1136 SEPTEMBER 25 THROUGH 28 Prized Pieces, Int'l Video/Film Competition. Awards ceremony and festival on November 8,9,10 and 11. Prized Pieces events recognize, honor and showcase excellence in black television and film production. Competition deadline is Sept. 14 FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT: Jackie Tshaka, Prized Piece Coordinator National Black Programming Consortium 32 October OCTOBER 16 & 17 Gordon Parks will host a two-day mini-film series as part of Festival 2000. Featured filmmakers include Ulysses D.Jenkins,Jr., Dinorah deJesus Rodriquez, Dario Sanmiquel, Rick Tejada-Flores and Roberto Bedoya, and the Focus Media Collective. Festival 2000: A Celebration of Cultural Diversity will present 200 performances, 50 events and 1,000 artist overall. FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT: Festival 2000 1182 Market Street, Suite 210 San Francisco, CA 94102 (415) 864-4237 OCTOBER 29 Third World Newsreel's Advanced Production Workshop provides intensive, hands-on training in 16mm .. C I ass i fi e d s filmmaking and video production for people of color and economically disadvantaged emerging film and video makers. The workshop schedule is designed to accommodate working people. Prior film, video or related experience is recommended. Participants should be able to attend regular meetings and meet production demands. The workshop is limited to 15 people chosen through an application and interview process. Tuition is $300. Application deadline is October 1,1990. The 12 month workshop begins October 29,1990. FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT: Kenyatta Funderburk Third World Newsreel Workshop 335 W. 38th Street, 5th Fl. New York, NY 10018 (212)947-9277 November NOVEMBER 5 Black Filmmakers Hall of Fame, Inc. is calling for entries to the 1991 Black Independent Film, Video and Screenplay Competition. The deadline for su~ mission is November 5. FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT: Black Filmmakers Hall of Fame, Inc. 405 Fourteenth Street, Suite 515 Oakland, CA 94612 (415) 465-0804 December DECEMBER 1 The Documentary Festival of New York, one of the few US festivals devoted exclusively to the documentary, is now seeking works that "confront, question, provoke, and explore new formal terrain and have strong artistic points of view." During the festival, awards will be given to outstanding video, film, madefor-1V productions, and most outstanding work by an emerging maker and will be attended by curators, broadcastors, distributors, and documentary enthusiast alike. Coordinators define documentary as any work "whose key elements derive from reality: people, events, images, sounds and text." Work must have been completed after September 1989. Format 35mm, 16mm, 3/4";,1/2" (preferable). Entry fee is $30. Deadline December 1. FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT: Susan Carucio Jonathan Stack Julie Gustafson The Documentary Film Festival of New York 454 Broome St. New York, NY 10013 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ NATIONALEDUCATIONALFllM AND VIDEO FESTIVAL is calling for entries for its 21 st Annual competition featuring: documentaries, dramaticfeaturesand shorts, animation, classroom programs, medical, health, training, instructional, special interest, made for TV, PSA's, art, student-made docs and narratives. Deadline: Dec. 1, 1990 Send entry forms to NEFVF 655 13th Street Oakland, CA 94612 415-465-6885 Black-owned independentproduction company seeking potential executive producer for low-budget feature fi 1m presently in development stage. Please contact: JUMP AT DE SUN FILMS, 180 Troy Ave., Apt. 4J, Brooklyn, NY 11213. (718)735-8424. PRODUCTION PARTNERS invites you to join us if you watch movies, make movies (or want to), or invest in movies (or want to). We're a non-profit group that helps film and video makers through low cost production equipm~nt rental, consultingservicesandinvestorsearches for better films by and about Black and Latino people. Call to join us or contribute to our production fund. Production Partners, 17 E. 17th Street, NY, NY 10003. Phone (212)675-3000. ,FAX (212)675-3275'. SUBMIT FILMS &VIDEOS: Forpossiblescreening incontinuing exhibition of works by Black filmmakers. Ongoing.AlIgenres. Fonnats: 16mm, Super 8mm, silent/sound, 3/ 4 video and 1/2 inch VHS. Sendworksto:'ToneyW.Merritt: Black Experiments in Film, c/o The San Francisco Cinematheque, 480 Potrero Ave., San Francisco, CA 94110. Include personal statement/ production stills. Facultyvacancy invisual media one-year appointment in the School of Communications at the American University. Temporary, non-tenure track appointmentavailablefor199091. For info on responsibilities and qualifications see our Phoenix Films presents: AFAN OF BLACK CHILDREN: display ad in this issue of fi Imsand videosforAfrican Ameri- Black Film Review. can Children about African American BLACK ARTS RESEARCH Children for All Children CENTER is an archival rePhoenix Films Inc. source center dedicated to 468 Park Avenue South the documentation, preser-' New York, NY 10016 vation and dissemination of (800)221-1274 the African cu Itural legacy. (212)684-5910 Resources include some 1300 recordings, cassettes and videEARTH VIDEO OFFERS 3/4 Ed- otapes, 500 books and jouriting $25/hr with Editor. Edit nals, 250 clipping files, and a yourself, 24 hour access, fOr BlackArts Database with over $1,200 perweek. Featuring time 30,000 entries. For more info code-window dubs, VHS dubs, send SASE to: John Gray, audio mixer, Amiga graphics, oirecto r, Black Arts Research edit list and character genera- Center, 30 Marian Street, Nyack, tor. Call (212)228-4254. NY 10960. (914)358-2089. 33 BULK RATE US Post'!ge PAID Washington,····DC 20066 Permit No. 1031 \,::::;.. ::. :/ '::::"., .;:;.. -• • • ·~~IIIIIIIII:,• • • • • .ii _.: : : : . .;:::>::::=:/\:: . III ~ • • • • • • • • . •;._ • Black Filmma'kers ,Hall of Fame, Inc. 1991 Black Independent Film, Video & Screenplay Competition An International Event Call for Entries Deadline; Novefilber 5, 1990 For entry information, contact: Black Filmmakers Hall of Fame, Inc., 405 14th Street, Suite 515 Oakland, CA 94612 (415) 465-0804 Iii;".'.. .::: ..