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Film 50: History of Cinema

Wednesday, April 16, 2008
3:00 p.m. Brightness
Souleymane Cissé (Mali, 1987)

Lecture by Marilyn Fabe


(Yeelen). Brightness is an innovative screen adaptation of the oral traditions and creation myths of the Bambara people of Mali. The thirteenth-century tale follows a young warrior, Nianankoro, in his quest to wrest knowledge from his father, who will kill him before allowing him to decipher the mysteries of Komo, the secret society that hoards the science of the gods. Nianankoro’s heroic journey is also a chase, across arid lands, through cultures and their folklore, and finally through time. “(The film’s) innovative narrative style captures the Bambara belief in time as circular, not linear, always returning to that initial ‘brightness’ which creates the world” (Cornelius Moore). The extraordinary visuals have been called “a timeless equivalent of science fiction”; however, “in Cissé’s African vision of science fiction, the future lies inevitably in the past” (Manthia Diawara, Library of African Cinema).

• Written by Cissé. Photographed by Jean-Noël Ferragut, Jean-Michel Humeau. With Issiaka Kane, Aoua Sangare, Niamanto Sanogo, Balla Moussa Keita. (105 mins, In Bambara with English subtitles, Color, 35mm, From Kino International)