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a man holds a child in his arms
A String Of Pearls documents three generations of fathers.
Another Planet

Ancestors rule the African world, whether they live in the spirit world or the in-law apartment downstairs.

Generalizing about African film, with its dozens of nations, many languages and rampant styles, is always risky. But this much can be said: the past is always present.

This year's Planet Africa taps ancestor worship - and ancestor critique - with ecumenical variety. Three films tell the story of Europeanized Africans going home to face vexing family tradition. In Les Chemins De L'Oued home is Algeria, in Waiting For Happiness it's small-town Mauritania, and in Promised Land it's an Afrikaaner family in the South African veldt.

Family is a compromised comfort in these films, and no more so than when it takes the name of the father. Even when Planet Africa's films aren't dealing directly with going home, they're chronicling all the disappointments waiting for those who put their trust in fathers, leaders or father figures.

Camille Billops and James Hatch's A String Of Pearls opens up the section this year, documenting three generations of shaky dads in Billops's family. Charles Najman's Haitian allegory, Royal Bonbon, tells the story of a man who tries to rule a village as King Chacha, which leads straight to tyranny.

And Mahamet Saleh Haroun, who made last year's aching, dusty drama Bye Bye Africa, returns with Abouna, in which a father's disappearance precipitates the disintegration of his family.

Planet Africa began as a stage where audiences could find common ground in films from Cape Town to Cairo to Kingston. (This year Shottas represents the Jamaican gangsta stylee.)

It looks like that consistency is there in theme. What's still missing is the singular breakout film, the African Raise The Red Lantern or Gabbeh.

CAMERON BAILEY
Cameron Bailey founded Planet Africa in 1995.

FILM FESTIVAL SCHEDULES

by movie name

by day

critic's picks by day


FILM FESTIVAL REVIEWS

ALL REVIEWS ALPHEBETICALLY
8 Women (François Ozon)
All or Nothing (Mike Leigh)
Angela (Roberta Torre)
Ararat (Atom Egoyan)
Bad Guy (Kim Ki-duk)
Bend It Like Beckhamn (Gurinder Chadha)
Bollywood/Hollywood (Deepa Mehta)
Bowling For Columbine (Michael Moore)
Chihwaseon (Im Kwon-taek)
City of God (Fernando Meirelles)
Cuban Rafters (Carles Bosch)
Deadend.com (Wyeth Clarkson)
Dirty Deeds (David Caesar)
Divine Intervention (Elia Suleiman)
El Bonaerense (Pablo Trapero)
Family (Sami Saif, Phie Ambo)
Intacto (Joan Carlos)
IO (Abbas Kiarostami)
Irreversible (Gaspar Noé)
Japon (Carlos Reygadasn)
Kedma (Amos Gitaï)
Laurel Canyon (Lisa Chodolenko)
L'Idole (Samantha Lang)
Long Life, Happiness and Prosperity (Mina Shum)
Madame Sata (Karim Aïnouz)
Marie-Jo and Her Two Loves (Robert Guédiguian)
Max (Menno Menyjes)
Miyazaki's Spirited Away (Hayao Miyazaki)
Moonlight Mile (Brad Silberling)
Morvern Callar (Lynne Ramsay)
My Mother's Smile (Macro Bellocchino)
Promised Land (Jason Xenopoulos)
Punch-Drunk Love (Paul Thomas Anderson)
Respiro (Emanuele Crialese)
Rub & Tug (Soo Lyu)
Russian Ark (Alexandr Sokurov)
Secretary (Steven Shainberg)
Sex Is Comedy (Catherine Breillat)
Small Voices (Gil M. Portes)
Spider (David Cronenberg)
Stevie (Steve James)
Sweet Sixteen (Ken Loach)
Talk To Her (Pedro Almodóvar)
The Good Thief (Neil Jordan)
The Last Letter (Frederick Wiseman)
The Lovers of the Arctic Circle (Julio Medem)
The Man Without A Past (Aki Kaurismäki)
The Son (Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne)
Tom (Mike Hoolboom)
Unknown Pleasures (Jia Zhang-ke)
Waiting For Happiness (Abderrahmane Sissaka)
Welcome to Collinwood (Anthony & Joe Russo)

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