Sugar Cane Alley
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (December 2023) |
Sugar Cane Alley | |
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![]() Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Euzhan Palcy |
Written by | Euzhan Palcy |
Based on | Sugar Cane Alley by Joseph Zobel |
Cinematography | Dominique Chapuis |
Edited by | Marie-Josèphe Yoyotte |
Music by | Groupe Malavoi |
Production companies | NEF Diffusion Orca Productions SU.MA.FA. |
Distributed by | Nouvelles Éditions de Films (NEF) |
Release date |
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Running time | 103 minutes |
Country | France |
Languages | French Martinican Creole |
Sugar Cane Alley (
Synopsis
José is a young orphan boy in a rural part of Martinique in the 1930s. Many of the people around him, including his grandmother, Ma'Tine, with whom he lives, work in the sugar cane fields where they are browbeaten and badly paid by the white boss. Ma'Tine is chronically ill, suffering several heart episodes, but she continues to recover from them and continue her work to support José.
José has a father figure: an elderly man, Medouze, who likes to tell him stories about Africa. José attends school at the insistence of his grandmother, who does not want him to end up working in the fields, the probable fate of most of his class. After Medouze goes missing, José finds him dead in a cane field. In order to earn his lunch, José gets tricked into doing housework for a woman who lives near school, leading to him being repeatedly late for class. Despite this, José excels at his French lessons and in his writing.
At school, José befriends a mulatto boy, Léopold, but Léopold's white father does not want him to associate with the black field workers. When he drives by and sees José and Léopold playing, he orders Léopold to get in the car. However, when trying to retrieve the horse that Léopold was riding, the father is kicked in the stomach by it, leading to great injury. On his deathbed, his father refuses to formally acknowledge Léopold as his son, believing that a mulatto should not carry the family name. Devastated by his father's rejection, Léopold runs away from home and goes missing.
José gets high test scores and earns a partial scholarship to attend high school in
José deals with pressure around him, especially from one of his teachers. When he writes an essay on the lives of poor blacks, he is accused of plagiarism, so he runs away from school, back to his small shack in the city. The professor goes to his house and tells José that he was wrongly accused, offering an apology and a full scholarship to the school and stipend monies. The stipend is enough to relieve Ma'Tine from her laundress job.
Later, José returns to Black Shack Alley after his grandmother has a
Awards
The film won the Best First Work award
References
- ^ "L'Académie des Arts et Techniques du Cinéma 1984 ceremony". Retrieved June 18, 2020.
External links
- Sugar Cane Alley at IMDb
- Sugar Cane Alley at Rotten Tomatoes