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A Family Trapped In The I Coast Conflict: Apolline Traore's New Film

By David ESNAULT
Africa Fespaco is Africa's biggest film festival which takes pace every two years in Burkina Faso's capital of Ouagadougou.  By ISSOUF SANOGO AFP
FEB 26, 2019 LISTEN
Fespaco is Africa's biggest film festival which takes pace every two years in Burkina Faso's capital of Ouagadougou. By ISSOUF SANOGO (AFP)

A new film set during the 2010-11 post-election violence in Ivory Coast and centred around the courage of a 12-year-old girl, premiered Tuesday at Fespaco, Africa's biggest film festival.

"Desrances" is written and directed by Burkinabe film-maker Apolline Traore, whose 2017 film "Frontieres" also featured at Fespaco.

Her new film focuses on the courage and wisdom of women in the face of men's folly.

The film's title refers to the character Francis Desrances, played by Haitian actor Jimmy Jean-Louis, perhaps best known for his role in the hit television series "Heroes" (as The Haitian).

Having lost his family as a youth during a massacre in Haiti, he has moved to Ivory Coast to rediscover his African roots.

Haitian actor Jimmy Jean-Louis who stars in Desrances says the future is in the hands of women. By MARCO LONGARI AFP Haitian actor Jimmy Jean-Louis who stars in "Desrances" says "the future is in the hands of women". By MARCO LONGARI (AFP)

In the film, Desrances is desperately looking for his wife and their newborn son, fearing they have been abducted by gangsters during the violence in Abidjan.

But the real hero of the film is his daughter Haila, played by Ivorian Jemima Naomi Nemlin. She saves her father's life and makes him see that she is as worthy of being his heir as his lost son.

"The film highlights the story of a girl who has a lot of strength, at least as much as a boy," said actor Jean-Louis after the film's screening in Ouagadougou.

"There are a lot of barriers against women in society, things that hinder their progress. It's men who have always led (society), and the result has not been great," he added.

"The future is in the hands of women!"

Traore, 43, became known internationally two years ago with "Frontieres" (Borders), which picked up a special award at the 2017 festival.

But with her new film, she hopes to become the first woman to win the festival's top prize.

David Kessler, director of Orange Studio which co-produced "Desrances", told AFP that young African directors today "are real pros".

Burkinabe film director Apolline Traore,43, receiving an award at Fespaco in 2017. By ISSOUF SANOGO AFP Burkinabe film director Apolline Traore,43, receiving an award at Fespaco in 2017. By ISSOUF SANOGO (AFP)

"I am very optimistic about the emergence of new talents" in African cinema, he added.

Kessler also pointed to "a huge appetite for local content".

"The public is demanding films and series made locally that speak to their everyday life, in Senegal or Ivory Coast for example."

"Desrances" is in competition with 19 other full-length movies for the so-called "African Oscar" -- the Golden Stallion of Yennenga, named after a mythical 12th-century warrior princess who founded the Mossi empire.

Fespaco -- the acronym in French of the Pan-African Film and Television Festival of Ouagadougou -- takes place in the capital of Burkina Faso every two years.

Launched in 1969 and loosely modelled on the Cannes Film Festival, it provides an opportunity for African movie and TV professionals to network and pitch their work to clients in Europe, North America, and beyond.

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