Heremakono (En attendant le bonheur)

Samedi 12 février 2022, 21h00 – Salle 500

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Heremakono/ Waiting for happiness

A film by Abderrahmane Sissako

with Khatra Ould Abder Kader,
Maata Ould Mohamed Abeid
Mauritania-France, Fiction, 2003, Colour, 95mn, 35MM or Bluray

©Trigon-Film.org

Nouadhibou is a small fishing town on a peninsula off the coast of Mauritania. It is here that Abadallah, a seventeen-year-old Malian, is to be reunited with his mother, while awaiting her departure for Europe. In this frontier town, Abdallah is a little lost and is trying to decipher the world around him. There is Nana, a sensual young woman who is trying to seduce him; Makan, who, like him, dreams of Europe; and Maata, a former fisherman turned electrician, and his disciple Khatra, a young apprentice. It is this mischievous child who teaches Abdallah the local language so that he can break out of his isolation.

Grand prix Fespaco 2003

Abderrahmane Sissako

Abderrahmane Sissako was born in Kiffa, Mauritania, in 1961 and raised in Mali, his father’s homeland. When he returned to Mauritania in 1980, the emotional and financial difficulties of adjustment made him turn to literature and film. A study grant allowed him to attend the Institute of the University of Moscow. Le Jeu (1989), first presented as a graduation assignment, won the prize for best short at the Giornate del Cinema Africano of Perugia in 1991. In 1993, October was shown at Locarno and won prizes the world over. His film Waiting for Happiness was screened at Cannes 2002 and was winner of the FIPRESCI award for best film in the Un certain regard section. It was also shown at the New York Film Festival in 2002 and won the Grand Prize at FESPACO in 2003. The overtly political Bamako (2006) represents a move away from autobiography but the explicit subject of Bamako had been the implicit themes of his other films: the legacy of colonialism and the lopsided relationship between the first and third worlds. Sissako is, along with Ousmane Sembène, Souleymane Cissé, Idrissa Ouedraogo and Djibril Diop Mambety, one of the few filmmakers from Sub-Saharan Africa to reach a measure of international influence. His 2014 film Timbuktu was selected to compete for the Palme d’Or in the main competition section at the 2014 Cannes Film Festival, garnered a 2015 Academy Award nomination for Best Foreign Language Film, and swept the 2015 Cesar Awards in France winning seven awards, including Best Director and Best Film.

Filmography

d’Abderrahmane Sissako

avec Khatra Ould Abder Kader,
Maata Ould Mohamed Abeid
Fr.–Maur. fict. vostf 2002 coul. 1h35 (35mm)

©Trigon-Film.org

Abdallah, un jeune garçon, retrouve sa mère à Nouadhibou, en attendant son départ vers l’Europe. Dans ce lieu d’exil dont il ne comprend pas la langue, il essaie de déchiffrer l’univers qui l’entoure.

Prix FIPRESCI, Festival de Cannes 2002
Étalon d’or, FESPACO 2003

Abderrahmane Sissako

Né le 13 octobre 1961 en Mauritanie, il passe son enfance et son adolescence au Mali où il fera ses études primaires et secondaires. Il vit ensuite dix ans à Moscou, où il se forme à l’Institut Fédéral d’Etat du Cinéma (le célèbre VGIK). Son film de fin d’études, Le Jeu, étonne déjà par sa maturité et ses choix esthétiques. Octobre, court-métrage tourné en Russie et primé dans de nombreux festivals, a pour thème principal l’exil, comme En attendant le bonheur.

Installé maintenant en France, il poursuit son œuvre, dont la singularité est qu’elle fédère à la fois fiction et documentaire, politique et poétique, ouvrant un nouvel espace à l’imaginaire de l’Afrique sahélienne.

Filmographie :

  • 1989 Le Jeu
  • 1990 Sex et perestroïka
  • 1993 Octobre, Prix Un Certain Regard Festival de Cannes
  • 1995 Le chameau et les bâtons flottants
  • 1996 Sabriya
  • 1997 Rostov-Luanda
  • 1998 La vie sur terre
  • 2002 Heremakono (En attendant le bonheur)
  • 2006 Bamako
  • 2008 8, Le rêve de Tiya
  • 2014 Timbuktu

Revue de presse

En attendant le bonheur :: FilmDeCulte

« Heremakono, en attendant le bonheur » : hors du temps, entre désert et océan, la vie continue