Award-winning film 'Atlantics' offers
haunting take on life in Senegal
Send a link to a friend
[November 16, 2019]
By Estelle Ndjandjo and Juliette Jabkhiro
DAKAR (Reuters) - To capture the harsh reality of life
in Senegal, film director Mati Diop chose young people
she met at building sites, bars and in Dakar's poorer
suburbs as the stars of 'Atlantics', a ghost story about
migrants and those they leave behind.
|
The coming-of-age tale has already won critical acclaim,
securing the Grand Prix award at the Cannes Film Festival in
May, and it will reach a wider audience this month when it hits
U.S. cinema screens and debuts on screening platform Netflix.
The film centers on Ada, a young woman facing a forced marriage
whose life unravels after her secret lover Souleiman drowns at
sea. Like thousands of West Africans in recent years, he had
risked his life on the Atlantic route via the Canary Islands to
Europe in search of a better future.
But rather than focusing on the migrants' fate,
Franco-Senegalese Diop highlights the challenges and struggles
faced by many young people inside Senegal, where around half the
population live below the poverty line.
"It was very delicate to make a movie about this because you
take the risk of locking an entire youth and an entire country
within the theme of immigration, and that was everything which I
did not want to do," said Diop, the first black female director
to win the jury prize in Cannes.
To preserve authenticity, Diop chose not to employ professional
actors in key roles. She met Ibrahim Traore, who plays Souleiman,
on a construction site. Other cast members were found outside
night clubs or in the streets where the film is set.
[to top of second column] |
Traore's character decides to brave the ocean after not being paid
for months for his building work - a common issue in Senegal where
underemployment is widespread.
"Everything that was covered in the movie exists in Senegal," said
Amadou Mbow, who plays a police officer who ends up being possessed
by Souleiman's ghost.
"It's really Senegal's reality: forced marriage and exploitation of
the youth."
The number of Senegalese risking the Atlantic route has fallen
sharply from its mid-2000s peak, when tens of thousands reached the
Canary Islands or died trying. But the lack of opportunities is a
growing issue in a country where more than 40% of the population is
under 15.
(Additional reporting by Christophe Van Der Perre and Yvonne Bell;
Writing by Juliette Jabkhiro; Editing by Alessandra Prentice and
John Stonestreet)
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|