L'afrance


Title: L'afrance
Year: 2001
Directors: Alain Gomis
Writers: Xavier Christiaens (adaptation) Xavier Christiaens (dialogue)
Actors: Djolof Mbengue | Delphine Zingg | Samir Guesmi | Théophile Sowié | Bass Dhem | Albert Mendy | Thierno Ndiaye | Oumar N'Diaye | Louis Beyler | Joséphine Mboub | Seybani Sougou | Gérard Tallet | Eric Franquelin | Sylvia Wels | Alioune Ndiaye
Rating: 6.5 | 69 votes
Languages: French
Color: Color
Country: France | Senegal
Company: Centre National de la Cinématographie (CNC)
Genres: Drama | Romance
Plot:
1) El Hadj is studying in Paris. He is one of the young Senegalese men who have come to Paris since the French colony became independent to get a good education so that he can serve his fatherland on his return. Unexpectedly he is suddenly confronted by a problem with his residence papers, just because he has arranged an extension too late. His pleasant life filled with good prospects has gone in one fell swoop. He faces a dilemma. He can stay illegally in France, the country where he feels at home, where he has his friends, has fallen in love and can drink water from the tap. Or he can return (without graduating) to the 3rd-world country of Senegal to use the knowledge he has acquired. It is not only a practical choice. It comes down to the question of who he is, who he thought he could be. Gomis’ impressive feature dbut looks at the theme of uprooting both on an existential and emotional level. The everyday confrontation with a different culture makes an apparently simple project difficult and chaotic. Gomis: ‘Exile means distancing oneself: abroad you are confronted with yourself. Who are we and which of our thoughts can resist the obtrusiveness of the other world? Probably only that which is really our own essence.’
Comments:
1) I saw this at an African film festival in DC in 2002. It follows ahistory student from Senegal who studies and works in Paris.

Better than La Haine, this film shows the stresses and strains ofAfrican expatriates in France. The student wants to get his PhD andreturn to Senegal to better life there. Everyone else in Paris (nativesas well as other Africans) think he just wants to stay in France.

The protagonist is torn between two worlds. The ways of Senegal are nowforeign to him, but neither is he European.

There is tension, violence, and sex and a good story. I wish I couldshow this to more people, but it's not available!!??!

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