Bassek Ba Kobhio

Bassek Ba Kobhio (born 1957) is a Cameroonian filmmaker and writer.[1]

Life

Bassek Ba Kobhio was born in 1957 in Ninje.[1] He started as a writer, winning a short story award while still at high school in 1976.

Kobhio's first feature film, Sango Malo (1991) was an auto-adaptation of his earlier novel. The film portrayed a new village school teacher whose indifference to traditional customs causes conflict with the school's headmaster and disrupts village life. His second film, Le grand blanc de Lambaréné (1995), brought out the complexities of character of Albert Schweitzer. Despite clear differences of setting and subject matter, both films "offer vivid portraits of flawed idealists who wish to do good, but are authoritarian, puritanical, at odds with their surroundings and neglectful towards their womenfolk".[2]

In 1997 he founded the film festival Écrans Noirs.[3]

In 2003 he collaborated with Didier Ouénangaré on The Silence of the Forest, an adaptation of a novel by Étienne Goyémidé.[4]

Works

Films

  • Sango Malo / The Village Teacher, 1990
  • Le grand blanc de Lambaréné / The Great White Man of Lambaréné, 1995
  • Musique s'en va-t-en guerre [Music goes to war], 1997. Documentary.
  • (with Didier Ouénangaré) Le silence de la forêt / The Forest, 2003

Books

  • Sango Malo: le maître du canton [Sango Malo: the village teacher], Paris: L'Harmattan, 1981
  • Les eaux qui débordent: nouvelles, Paris: L'Harmattan, 1984
gollark: Not near spiral?
gollark: Er, near spiral?
gollark: Accidental spiral:https://dragcave.net/lineage/RxyPc
gollark: NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!
gollark: Ummm... I'll try silver x messy random junk?

References

  1. Roy Armes (2008). Dictionary of African Filmmakers. Indiana University Press. p. 148. ISBN 0-253-35116-2.
  2. Roy Armes (2006). African Filmmaking: North and South of the Sahara. Indiana University Press. p. 100. ISBN 0-253-21898-5.
  3. Philippe Randrianarimanana, Bassek Ba Kobhio, l'homme qui met le cinéma au cœur de l'Afrique, TV5Monde, 17 July 2017.
  4. Blandine Stefanson (2014). "Literary Adaptation". In Blandine Stefanson; Sheila Petty (ed.). Directory of World Cinema Africa. 39. Intellect Books. p. 224. ISBN 978-1-78320-391-8.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.