Mandabi
Screening on Film
Directed by Ousmane Sembene.
With Makhouredia Gueye, Ynousse N’diaye, Isseu Niang.
Senegal, 1968, 35mm, color, 90 min.
Wolof with English subtitles.
Print source: New Yorker Films
With Makhouredia Gueye, Ynousse N’diaye, Isseu Niang.
Senegal, 1968, 35mm, color, 90 min.
Wolof with English subtitles.
Print source: New Yorker Films
Sembene’s first comedy, his first film in color, and first work in Wolof—the language spoken by most of the population of Senegal—Mandabi is the deceptively simple story of a man whose initial good fortune leads to encounters with an intimidating barrage of Third World bureaucracy. The film, which consists of a series of comic mishaps involving Dieng’s futile attempts to get an identity card so he can cash his check, takes the viewer on a journey with corrupt government officials and impoverished members of Dakar’s proletariat. Mandabi was seen as a betrayal by many in the newly independent Senegal. The fact that the film was a comedy did not spare Sembene’s film from attacks in the press.