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Synopsis

On an uneventful evening at a gas station in Burkina Faso, a service attendant completes a transaction with a passing motorist and begins to enter the office when he is ambushed by two armed men who, after a brief struggle, manage to break free from him and wrest control of the cash box. But before the robbers can make a getaway into the populated street, a second attendant emerges from office and opens fire on the brazen thieves, mortally wounding one of them. Instead of fleeing, the second robber draws his weapon, disarms the attendant, and pries the cash box from the hands of his fallen accomplice before disappearing into the busy main road under the cloak of darkness. A cut to a shot of an idyllic afternoon shows the escaped thief, Samba Traoré (Bakary Sangaré) aboard a rural bus bound for the remote, humble village of his youth: a place that he had left in order to seek out his fortune in the big city of Burkina Faso, and now proudly returns to after a ten year absence with the confident air of untold fortune which, unbeknownst to the curious – but visibly impressed – villagers, has been shamefully snatched on a case full of tainted money. After exchanging a polite glance with the beautiful Saratou (Mariam Kaba) near the outskirts of the village, Samba returns home to find his supporting parents eager to hear of their son’s adventures in the big city – an experience that, as his father observes, seems to have changed him – an intuitive remark that he circumnavigates by playing a well-loved tribal folksong with a flute that had been given to him by his father before leaving home. Meanwhile, to the isolated villagers, fate does seem to have indeed smiled on the prodigal son when he pays a visit to Salif (Abdoulaye Komboudri), a jovial ne’er-do-well and henpecked husband, and successively wins all of his childhood friend’s money (as well as his staked horse and cart) on a series of skin games at the market square. Samba further raises the eyebrows of the villagers when he embarks on a series of extravagant (and conspicuous) purchases: donating a herd of cattle to the farming community, opening a neighborhood bar with Salif, hiring the town’s unemployed laborers to initiate construction on his planned two-storey home. However, Samba’s attempts at self re-invention prove tenuous as he continues to wrestle with recurring nightmares and his family’s increasing suspicions over his ambiguous source of good fortune and unpredictable, volatile behavior. —Strictly Film School

Director

Original

Idrissa Ouedraogo

Idrissa Ouedraogo is one of Africa’s most prolific filmmakers. His early films are remakable in their ability to communicate through imagery. Poko, Les Ecuelles (The Wooden Bowls), Les Funerailles du Larle Naba (The Funeral of Larle Narba), Ouagadougou, Ouga deux roues (Ouagadougou, Ouga Two Wheels), and Issa le tisserand (Issa the Weaver) appeal to a multi-lingual audience without using dialogue or voice-over narration. Although his subsequent films incorporate dialogue, Ouedraogo’s talent for creating meaning with images remains a hallmark of his work.

Ouedraogo’s first commercial success, Yaaba (Grandmother), narrates the story of two young children who befriend an old woman wrongly accused of malevolent sorcery. This film exemplifies Ouedraogo’s interest in the multiple ramifications of individual choices. It also demonstrates Ouedraogo’s skill at adapting the poetics of African oral tales to contemporary cinema. Nwachukwu Frank… read more

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