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Ousmane Sembène

Director

“I am really unable to talk about my life – I don’t know my life. I’ve travelled a lot and this is the life that I have lived, but that doesn’t mean that I know myself.”

 

Biography

Ousmane Sembène (January 1, 1923 — June 9, 2007), often credited in the French style as Sembène Ousmane in articles and reference works, was a Senegalese film director, producer and writer. The Los Angeles Times considered him one of the greatest authors of Africa and has often been called the “Father of African film.”

The son of a fisherman, Ousmane Sembène was born in Ziguinchor in Casamance to a Muslim Wolof family. He went to an Islamic school (common for many boys in Senegal) and to the French school, learning French and basic Arabic in addition to his mother tongue, Wolof. He had to leave his French school in 1936 when he clashed with the principal. After an unsuccessful stint working with his father (Sembène was prone to sea-sickness), he left for Dakar in 1938, where he worked a variety of manual labour jobs.

In 1944, Sembène was drafted into the Senegalese Tirailleurs (a corps of the French Army) in World War II and later fought for the Free French Forces. After… read more

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Displaying 4 wall posts.
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Malik

25Feb13

“In the army we saw those who considered themselves our masters naked, in tears, some cowardly or ignorant. When a white soldier asked me to write a letter for him, it was a revelation—I thought all Europeans knew how to write. The war demystified the colonizer; the veil fell.”

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Danny Kana

23Sep11

Black Girl is astonishing

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Alex

13Jul11

Can someone recommend me a film from him? the one which defines his style better or the one you consider better. Thank you.

Cameron Buckley likes this

  • Picture of Cameron Buckley

    Cameron Buckley

    22Sep11

    Black Girl would be my recommendation. Watch out, African cinema is very hard to jump into if you've only seen western cinema. African cinema is considered to be oceans apart from western cinema, so it can be very very slow at times. Enjoy!

  • Picture of Alex

    Alex

    5Feb12

    Thank you!

  • Picture of Jacques de Villiers

    Jacques de Villiers

    15Jan13

    Moolaadé is incredible, as is Camp de Thiaroye. That said, I've only seen those two, Xala and Mandabi, and the latter two I like nearly as much for, though Xala's satire often shines brilliantly.

Picture of YprocKcid

YprocKcid

10Mar11

Known as "The Father of African film"; Senegalese Marxist director; themes tackle social, political, and religious issues in postcolonial Africa; humor and vitality.

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Sembene

57 posts by 21 people almost 3 years ago

Ousmane Sembene

8 posts by 6 people almost 3 years ago