Djibril Diop Mambéty
Djibril Diop Mambéty (January 1945 – July 23, 1998) was a Senegalese film director, actor, orator, composer and poet. Though he made only five feature films and two short documentary films, they received international acclaim for their original and experimental cinematic technique and non-linear, unconventional narrative style.
Born to a Muslim family near Dakar, Senegal's capital city, Mambéty was an ethnic Wolof. He died in 1998 while being treated for lung cancer in a Paris hospital.
Biography
Djibril Diop Mambéty was born in
In 1969, at age 23, without any formal training in filmmaking, Mambéty directed and produced his first short film, Contras' City (City of Contrasts). The following year Mambéty made another short, Badou Boy, which won the Silver Tanit award at the 1970 Carthage Film Festival in Tunisia.
Mambéty's technically sophisticated and richly symbolic first feature-length film,
On July 23, 1998, Mambéty died of lung cancer at age 53 at a hospital in Paris, France.
He was the subject of a 2008 documentary film
Film career
Contras'city
Djibril Diop Mambéty's earliest film, a short entitled Contras'city (1968), highlighted the contrasts of cosmopolitanism and unrestrained ostentation in Dakar's baroque architecture against the modest, everyday lives of the Senegalese. Mambéty's recurrent theme of hybridity—the blending of elements from precolonial Africa and the colonial West in a neocolonial African context—is already evident in Contras'city, which is considered Africa's first comedy film.
Badou Boy
In 1970 Mambéty released his next short, Badou Boy, another sarcastic look at Senegal's capital that followed the adventures of what the director described as a "somewhat immoral street urchin who is very much like myself".[2] The contest pits the non-conformist individual against an absurdly caricatured policeman who pursues the protagonist through comedically improbable scenarios. Badou Boy celebrates an urban subculture while parodying the state.
Touki Bouki
Considered by many to be his most daring and important film, Mambéty's feature-length debut, Touki Bouki (The Hyena's Journey) more fully developed his earlier themes of hybridity and individual marginality and isolation. Based on his own story and script, Djibril Diop Mambéty made Touki Bouki with a budget of $30,000—obtained in part from the Senegalese government. Though influenced by French New Wave, Touki Bouki displays a style all its own. Its camerawork and soundtrack have a frenetic rhythm uncharacteristic of most African films—known for their often deliberately slow-paced, linearly evolving narratives. Through jump cuts, colliding montage, dissonant sonic accompaniment, and the juxtaposition of premodern, pastoral and modern sounds and visual elements, Touki Bouki conveys and grapples with the hybridization of Senegal. A pair of lovers, Mory and Anta, fantasize about fleeing Dakar for a mythic and romanticized France. The film follows them as they try to scavenge and hustle the funds for their escape. They both make it to the steamliner that would transport them to Paris, but before it disembarks, Mory is drawn back to Dakar and cannot succumb to the seduction of the West. Touki Bouki won the Special Jury Award at the Moscow film Festival and the International Critics Award at Cannes.
Hyènes
An African adaptation of Friedrich Dürrenmatt's famous Swiss play, The Visit, Hyènes (
The film is distributed by California Newsreel Productions.
Le Franc
This first film in Mambéty's uncompleted trilogy, Contes des Petites Gens (Tales of Little People),
Le Franc is part of the project, Three Tales from Senegal which also includes "Picc Mi" (Little Bird) and "Fary l'anesse" (Fary the Donkey).
The film is distributed by California Newsreel Productions.
La Petite Vendeuse de Soleil
As the second installment in Mambéty's trilogy exalting the lives and promise found among ordinary Senegalese, the 45-minute film,
Cinematic style and themes
The notion of
Other common thematic concerns in Mambéty's films are power, wealth and delusion. Offering a cynical view of humanity in his last feature-length film, Hyènes, Mambéty implicates Africans themselves for a continuing dependency on the West. Through the film and in many interviews, the director suggests that Africans are short-sighted in looking to the colonial past for their future, and are misled by their unrestrained desires for material goods that ensure Africa's dependency on foreign aid. Ultimately, however, Mambéty transmitted a message of hopefulness in his final films, which elevate the "little people," as the bearers of a positive and new Africa. "The only truly consistent, unaffected people in the world," Mambéty once said of the marginalized, "for whom every morning brings the same question: how to preserve what is essential to themselves".[7]
Vlad Dima, a professor of French studies, describes Mambéty's alternation "between synchronous and asynchronous sound" in his films as a way for viewers to move from a "visual plane" to an "aural narrative" plane. Dima provides an example of this technique as seen in the opening scene of Contras'city when French classical music accompanies the visual of the French-style Dakar City Hall building; it is then interrupted by the Senegalese flag, a disruption of the music, and a voiceover of someone saying "Dakar."[8]
Filmography
Feature films
- Badou Boy (1970)
- Touki Bouki (also called The Journey of the Hyena) (1973), International Critic's Prize at Cannes and Special Jury Prize Moscow Film Festival[9]
- Hyènes(1992)
- Le Franc (1994)
- La Petite Vendeuse de Soleil (1999)
Short films
- Contras'city (1968)
- Parlons Grand-mère (Let's talk Grandmother) (1989)
Personal life
Mambéty was the older brother of musician Wasis Diop and the uncle of actress and director Mati Diop, Wasis Diop's daughter. He was the father of Teemour Diop Mambety.
See also
- African cinema
References
- ^ "MAMBÉTY FOR EVER". SPLA South Planet. Retrieved 12 March 2012.
- ^ Barlet, Olivier. "Djibril Diop Mambety, the one and only". Archived from the original on 2006-08-05.
- ^ "The 100 Best Films Of World Cinema – 52. Touki Bouki". Empire.
- ^ a b "The Hyena's Last Laugh - A conversation with Djibril Diop Mambety". California Newsreel. Archived from the original on 2010-12-20.
- ^ Scott, A. O. (November 24, 2000). "With Ties to Africa but Varied Lives All Their Own". The New York Times.
- ^ "Djibril Diop Mambety: un cinéaste à contre-courant". African Studies Association. Archived from the original on 2007-10-06. Retrieved 2006-11-03.
- ^ "THREE TALES FROM SENEGAL". California Newsreel. Archived from the original on 2006-11-06.
- S2CID 56383695.
- ^ "8th Moscow International Film Festival (1973)". MIFF. Archived from the original on 2013-01-16. Retrieved 2013-01-04.
- Thackway, Melissa Africa shoots back : alternative perspectives in Sub-Saharan Francophone African film Bloomington : Indiana University Press ; Oxford : James Currey ; Cape Town : David Philip, 2003.
- Russell, Sharon A. Guide to African Cinema Westport, Conn. : Greenwood Press, 1998.
- "Sinemaabi a dialogue with Djibril Diop Mambety" by Beti Ellerson Poulenc
- Sada Niang: Djibril Diop Mambety: un cinéaste à contre-courant, Paris: Editions L'Harmattan, 2002
- Clements, Clare: "Meandering through Dakar. Flâneurs, Fragmentation and the Flow of Life in Djibil Diop Mambéty’s Cinema of Wanderers", in: manycinemas 2/2011, 16–29, online at manycinemas Archived 2012-11-16 at the Wayback Machine