Katanga Business

Katanga Business is a 2009 film by Belgian director Thierry Michel that explores the mining industry in Katanga Province, Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Katanga Business
Directed byThierry Michel
Written byThierry Michel
Narrated byJacques Dubuisson
Music byMarc Hérouet
CinematographyMichel Téchy
Edited byMarie Quinton
Production
company
Les Films de la Passerelle
Les Films d'Ici
Release date
  • April 1, 2009 (2009-04-01)
Running time
120 minutes
CountryBelgium
LanguageFrench
English
Dutch

Plot

The province of Katanga in the south east of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) has huge mineral riches including uranium, zinc, copper and cobalt. These were exploited in colonial times by the Union Minière du Haut Katanga, which was nationalized in 1966 by President Mobutu Sese Seko. Mobutu lavished wealth on his clan, but the mines were soon abandoned, forcing the miners into illegal artisanal workings. More recently new investors have bought into the industry including Indians and Chinese.[1]

The film surveys the industrial and artisanal mining industry in Katanga Province. The film explores the murky dealings between the state-owned Gécamines, foreign mining companies such as First Quantum Minerals and individuals like George Forrest, Indian and Chinese investors and state officials. It questions who benefits from the mining operations.[2] Katanga Business highlights the charismatic governor of the province, the populist Moses Katumbi.[3] It shows the great wealth of the province and the abject poverty of the miners.[4]

Technical

Thierry Michel had produced works on the DRC over a period of seventeen years before making Katanga Business. Earlier works were Zaire, le cycle du serpent (1992), Les Derniers Colons (1995), Mobutu roi du Zaïre (1999) and Congo River, Beyond Darkness (2005).[1][5] Taken together his films provide a unique overview of the social, economic and political life of the country. He made the television documentary film Katanga, la guerre du cuivre (Katanga, the copper war) earlier in 2009, the basis for the film.[2] A book was published with the same title including text and photographs by Thierry Michel.[6]

Michel's Congolese assistant director Guy Kabeya Muya received death threats for having worked on the film. The filmmaker Monique Mbeka Phoba quickly mobilized an international campaign to ensure that the Congolese authorities extended their protection.[7]

Reception

A reviewer in Le Monde said of the film that Thierry Michel is not trying to make an indictment, that he approaches the subject with "eyes wide open", and that the film is "bursting with life, in which one will find, as easily as copper in Kolwezi, reason for hope".[8] Another reviewer criticized the decision to let the images and people in the film tell the story, as in a drama, rather than providing explanations of causes and effects. As a result, the film therefore is mostly a simple depiction of the impact of globalization and neo-colonialism.[4] The film was nominated for a Magritte Award in the category of Best Documentary in 2011.[9]

gollark: `a →[b]`?
gollark: It would also allow functorness.
gollark: I think it'd make more sense with the first one being `b`.
gollark: 🆎 🔡
gollark: Āh.

References

  1. Bosséno 2011, p. 268.
  2. Bosséno 2011, p. 268-269.
  3. Cappelaere 2011, p. 197.
  4. Excessif.
  5. Passerelle.
  6. Michel & M'Bokolo 2009.
  7. Guy Kabeya Muya.
  8. Sotinel 2009.
  9. Engelen, Aurore (January 14, 2011). "Magritte Awards shine spotlight on Belgian Francophone cinema". Cineuropa. Retrieved January 11, 2013.
Sources
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.