Chez jolie coiffure
Belgium/Cameroon , 2018, DCP, color, 71 min.
French with English subtitles.
DCP source: Icarus Films
Mbakam reveals the unseen worlds contained within the microcosm of a hair salon inside a Brussels shopping mall in a neighborhood that has become a hub of African transplants. Helmed by the steadfast Sabine, the salon is not only a place of business, but a community center, therapy clinic, or even display window—when the curious white tourists gawk—and at its most precarious, the entire mall becomes a trap where police search for undocumented immigrants. Mbakam spent a year within the glassed-off confines of the salon, filming Sabine as she multitasks. During the intimate swathes of time-consuming hair braiding and styling, shop talk ranges from the misconceptions of life in Europe for African immigrants; the sex trafficking of young African women and everyone’s money troubles; to joking, flirting and of course, love and beauty advice. The latter are usually courtesy of Sabine, who is the gentle guide and the stoic center of this ad-hoc sanctuary. Between helping people with their relationships, finding housing and jobs or recruiting for her tontine, Sabine also discloses her own traumatic tale of a hard-won, precarious independence, one that has taken her far away from Cameroon, yet has enabled her to nurture a new, improvised family making their way on unstable ground.
In Mbakam’s early short, a Gabonese woman attempting to enter Belgium undergoes a belittling interrogation at the immigration office, where they deem illegal “aliens” guilty until proven guilty. By connecting with her ancestors and her feminine powers, she creates an opening to an alternate resolution.