| Daresalam | | Directed by | Issa Serge Coelo | | Produced by | Pierre Javeaux Issa Serge Coelo Pierre Chevalier | | Written by | Issa Serge Coelo Ismael Ben-Cherrif Pierre Guillaume | | Starring | Abdoulaye Ahmat Haikal Zakaria | | Music by | Khalil Chahine | | Cinematography | Jean-Jacques Mrejen | | Editing by | Catherine Schwartz | | Release date(s) | 2000 | | Running time | 105 min. | | Language | Chadian Arabic, French | | IMDb profile | Daresalam (English: "Let There Be Peace"[1]) is a 2000 dramatic film by Chadian director Issa Serge Coelo. It has been considered one of the very few recent African films that has treated the theme of the internecine conflicts that have ravaged the African continent since independence.[2] While set in a fictional African country called Daresalam, it reflects the civil war that ravaged Chad during the 1960s and 1970s.[3] Pierre Chevalier (1905 â 2001) was a well-known caver and mountaineer from France, with many alpine ascents and cave explorations to his credit. ...
Pierre Guillaume was the founder of the book shop La Vieille Taupe in 1965 and later the negationist publishing house of the same name. ...
Cat Schwartz on Call for Help Catherine Michelle Schwartz (often called Cat for short) (born May 27, 1977) is an American television personality best known for her former role as co-host on the TechTV television program Call for Help with Leo Laporte. ...
Year 2000 (MM) was a leap year starting on Saturday (link will display full 2000 Gregorian calendar). ...
Chadian Arabic is the variety of Arabic spoken in Chad. ...
The English language is a West Germanic language that originates in England. ...
Synopsis
The film takes place in a fictional central African country (called Daresalam, "the Land of Peace" in Arabic) amidst a civil war. It features as main characters two young friends, Koni (Haikal Zakaria) and Djimi (Abdoulaye Ahmat), whose peaceful existence is interrupted when the central government irrupts in their village harassing them and and browbeating the villagers into paying new taxes to help fight the civil war. A heated discussion ensues, which degenerates, causing the death of a government official, which causes in retaliation the burning of the village and the massacre of its inhabitants. Koni and Djimi now pass with others to the rebellion, but the rebels eventually split, with Djimi remaining with the hardliners and Koni going instead with a faction which supports compromise with the government, thus estranging the two friends. Koni will later be executed in a coup, while Djimi will leave the rebels and return to his home village with a war widow and a sewing machine left to him by a fallen combatant, with which he can attempt to start a new life for himself and his family.[4] Director Issa Coelo, in speaking of his film, explains he wanted to expose the vicious circle that originates when a despotic government causes the outbreak of a civil war, which ends to feed itself endlessly, as each power maintains itself through despotism, thus generating its own armed opposition. In Coelo's words, "war becomes the only economy of the country. Violence, the only way of speech and communication possible. ... With in mind the myth of Cain and Abel, Daresalam narrates how this war machine finishes to put one against the other two friends, at the beginning moved by the same ideals. This story is meant to be a speech against war and for humanity's survival."[5] Cain and Abel redirect here. ...
Reception & Evaluation The LA Weekly judged the film positively, calling the it "achingly beautiful and sad", and appreciates the final, which "ends on a note of un-ironic optimism that is more radical than all the calculated nihilism currently being served up on Western movie screens", and compared the film to Barbet Schroeder's Our Lady of the Assassins in their common ambition "to shed light on shadowy existences".[6] L.A. Weekly is a free weekly tabloid-sized newspaper (a so-called alternative weekly) in Los Angeles, California. ...
Barbet Schroeder (born August 26, 1941 in Teheran to a Swiss diplomat father) is a movie director and producer who started his career in French cinema in the 1960s, working together with directors such as Jean-Luc Godard and Jacques Rivette. ...
Our Lady of Assassins Movie poster. ...
The fim is analyzed by Roy Armes, that observes how Coelo avoids any heroics, showing the rebels' limitations and the confusion of the conflict. While judging the work "a sincere and serious study of a key aspect of contemporary Africa", he feels that the film lacks the passion of Med Hondo's works on the Polisario rebels, possibly because of Coelo's belief that "cinema should ask questions rather than give awnsers", which could explain the distance we are maintained from the two main characters.[2] The film is also mentioned by Françoise Pfaff as an example of a new series of African historical films, which avoid the over-simplification of the past, and in particular Daresalam in its problematic description of post-indepence Africa is seen as close to Flora Gomes' Mortu Nega.[1] The Polisario, Polisario Front, or Frente Polisario, from the Spanish abbreviation of Frente Popular de Liberación de SaguÃa el Hamra y RÃo de Oro (Popular Front for the Liberation of Saguia el-Hamra and [[RÃo de Oro]]) is a Sahrawi rebel movement working for the separation...
Notes and references - ^ a b F. Pfaff, Focus on African Films, 3
- ^ a b R. Armes, African Filmmaking: North and South of the Sahara, 150
- ^ (French)"Issa Serge Coelo, cinéaste tchadien: "On a encore du travail à faire"", Tchad et Culture.
- ^ Daresalam
- ^ [1]
- ^ E. Hardy, "Apocalypse Now", LA Weekly, 9-5-2001.
External links - (French)Daresalam in Africultures
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