Ramata (film)

Ramata is a 2007 feature-length fiction film directed by Léandre-Alain Baker and starring the model Katoucha Niane in the title role.

Ramata
Directed byLéandre-Alain Baker
Produced byLa Huit Production, Mediatik Communication
Written byLéandre-Alain Baker, Miguel Machalski
StarringKatoucha Niane
Music byWasis Diop
CinematographyFrançois Kuhnel
Edited byDidier Ranz
Release date
2007
Running time
90 minutes
CountrySenegal
LanguageFrench

Synopsis

Ramata is a spellbindingly beautiful woman in her fifties. She has been married for thirty years now to Matar Samb, a former prosecutor who is now the Minister of Justice. They live in Les Almadies, an elegant neighbourhood of Dakar. Ngor Ndong is 25. He is a young, strong, mysterious man with no fixed residence and an occasional petty crook known by the police. One evening, in a taxi that Ngor Ndong just happens to be driving, Ramata agrees to follow this young man to the Copacabana. She then begins a new life.[1]

Production

The film was adapted from a novel by Abasse Ndione.[2] Baker said he hesitated at first over choosing Katoucha as the lead due to her reputation and the fact that she was not an actress, but eventually accepted that she was right for the role. He said of the film "Essentially, it is the story of the metamorphosis of a woman, her relationship with the world, and the universe around her".[3] Ramata was released in France in 2011.[4]

gollark: How are you defining "exists" here? People 500 years ago had moral standards. Probably same going back to even the invention of agriculture.
gollark: What things? What do you mean "more accepted"?
gollark: Explain.
gollark: ?
gollark: We don't *have* a single consistent morality system.

References

  1. "Ramata". FCAT. Retrieved 6 April 2012.
  2. "Ramata, adapté par Léandre-Alain Baker". Chez Gangoueus. 17 May 2011. Retrieved 23 March 2012.
  3. "Léandre-Alain Baker talks about his film Ramata interpreted by Katoucha". African Women in Cinema. 4 June 2011. Retrieved 23 March 2012.
  4. "Léandre Alain Baker". CineObs. Archived from the original on 4 January 2013. Retrieved 23 March 2012.


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