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 Adanggaman
(2000)
Directed by Roger
Gnoam M'bala, Cameroon (Not appearing
in person)
Presented by Film Expert, Mbye Cham
Screening: Thursday,
October 16 at 8.45 p.m.
Country: Ivory Coast
Running Time: 90 mins
Language: Bambara and Baule with English subtitles
Genre: Drama
This
historic drama is about an African whose village is captured
and its inhabitants forced into slavery by the African
collaborator Adanggaman (Rasmane Ouedraogo). Traitorous and
arbitrary, Adanggaman has a round face that constantly calls
out for the rum the Dutch traders ply him with. The film's
Ivory Coast-born director, Roger Gnoan M'Bala who
wrote the screenplay with Jean-Marie Adlaffi and Bertin
Akaffou blends truth and fiction, and the storytelling is
so simple that its directness feels fresh and rousing. The
scenes of Africans marching in chains and stocks, monitored by
other Africans, are a shock and linger in your mind for days
afterward.
Mr.
M'Bala has found a novel way of involving the audience. He
uses rhythms and songs and other types of sounds throughout
the picture for aural texture to contrast with the horrors on
screen; there's a lovely and unforgettable song over the
opening credits with gentle strumming and chants. His use of
sound is a shrewd gambit, and his rejection of the noisy and
oppressive crunch of the too loud sound mixing we hear in most
American films pays off. In this 17th-century story of the
oppressive slave trading among African tribes, we're
introduced to Ossei (Ziable Honore Goore Bi) by hearing his
voice in the distance. The camera slowly moves over to the
spot where he pleads with and eventually cajoles his
girlfriend into delaying her afternoon fishing trip for an
exploration of another type. Afterward, as she goes off to
join the fishing group who
cast man-size nets into the waters as they chant folk rhythms
he peeks out of the brush with a sly smile on his face.
He's a man used to getting what he wants. And he doesn't want
to marry Adjo (Nicole Suzis Menyeng), the woman his family
with the exception of his mother is determined to pair him
off with. His mother, Mo Akassi (Albertine N'Guessan), tries
to be a bit more understanding, if only because she's annoyed
by tribal sanctimony. But for the most part, there's ridicule
about Ossei's affections for one of a lower class: "The
bad blood of that slave will not tarnish our noble
blood." Ossei refuses the forced marriage at the
last minute, and he's beaten and banished.
He
trails off into the wilderness, alone and ashamed. After Ossei
wanders off, his village is attacked, his father and
girlfriend and others are slain and the remaining villagers
are taken as slaves. The pillagers are
led by a group of women in orange robes with close-cropped
hair and ridges of braids studded with white shells across the
top. In one of the most upsetting scenes, the young village
women scoot across the ground on their haunches and scream as
they're being circled by the invaders. Mr. M'Bala uses lots of
long shots to communicate the action, instead of punching up
"Adanggaman" with stuttered editing to contrive
tension. He lets the film work at its own pace, though there
is an opening jolt as we see one of Ossei's tribesmen being
bound and gagged. The image of an African being trussed up for
servitude by other Africans is deeply discomforting, and Mr.
M'Bala exploits the power of that rare image. Ossei plots to
free his mother and tracks the movements of the native
slavers. His mission is the beginning of his maturation from
brat to motivated adult, woven into one of the many gripping
plot turns the movie takes. The narrative motion is tricky;
first it canters, then shifts into a heady, quick gallop.
What's most fascinating about "Adanggaman" are the
scenes that feel like anecdotal rest stops but that are
actually building into a nuanced and engrossing whole.
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