
Menged
Thursday, February 7, 2008
| 5:30 p.m. | Two by Ousmane Sembène, plus Menged (Free Screening!) |
Free First Thursday Screening!
Tickets available at the PFA Theater starting at 4:30
Introduced by Paap Alsaan Sow
Tickets available at the PFA Theater starting at 4:30
Introduced by Paap Alsaan Sow
Paap Alsaan Sow teaches Wolof at UC Berkeley.
Borom Sarret is an early gem from Ousmane Sembène, who passed away last year. A poisoned love letter to the director’s hometown of Dakar, Senegal, it follows a luckless cart driver on one eventful day spent lugging around an old woman, a man carrying his dead child, and a wealthy man whose promises prove costly. Sembène’s Tauw is a portrait of a young Dakar man coping with unemployment, family conflicts, and changing social expectations. A traditional Ethiopian folk tale is brought to life in Daniel Taye Workou’s engaging Menged, which won Best Short Film at the influential Ouagadougou Film Festival. A father, his son, and their nonplussed donkey voyage through the countryside to the market, but the real star of this parable is Ethiopia’s landscape, a painter’s palette of rolling hills, green fields, and vast blue skies. With music by Tlahoun Gessesse, a legend often featured on the influential Ethiopiques CD releases.
—Jason Sanders
• Borom Sarret (Ousmane Sembène, Senegal, 1964, 19 mins, In French with English subtitles, B&W, 35mm, From New Yorker Films). Tauw (Ousmane Sembène, Senegal, 1969, 27 mins, In Wolof with English subtitles, B&W, Digital video, From New Yorker Films). Menged (Daniel Taye Workou, Germany/Ethiopia, 2006, 21 mins, In Amharic with English subtitles, Color, Beta SP)
• (Total running time: 67 mins)

