A young woman with a towel around her looking out a screened windowalr

The Blue Eyes of Yonta
(Udju Azul di Yonta)

Flora Gomes in Conversation with Haden Guest
Screening on Film
$15 Special Event Tickets
Directed by Flora Gomes.
With Maysa Marta, Pedro Dias, Antonio Simao Medes.
Portugal/Guinea-Bissau/France/UK/Switzerland, 1992, 35mm, color, 90 min.
Portuguese and Kriolu with English subtitles.

Gomes’ second film is a bold follow-up to Mortu Nega that extends its critical scrutiny of post-liberation Guinea-Bissau through a poignantly nuanced story of ardent dreams fractured across different generations. The eponymous heroine of The Blue Eyes of Yonta is a spirited young woman smitten with an old family friend, a hero of the revolution falling on hard times as he struggles to keep his business afloat and stay true to his ideals despite the corrosive pressures of the black market. Yonta’s romantic yearning too easily leads her to misinterpret the love letter written by a naïve graduate student who is himself enraptured by the sway of European culture and learning. Gomes subtly uses this triangle of misguided, projected love—for country and for amorous partner—to critique the romantic illusions of post-revolution Guinea-Bissau while also evoking a rich tableau of everyday life and everyday hardships. The Blue Eyes of Yonta is guided by an even more symbolically charged ambition than Mortu Nega, a design made clear both in the film’s remarkable Felliniesque closing, as well as its opening scene following a gang of young boys racing inner tubes each branded with important dates and figures in the history of Guinea-Bissau. The Blue Eyes of Yonta makes clear Gomes’ talent as both an intuitively astute chronicler of history in the making and a weaver of powerful nuanced allegories of nation and community. – HG

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The Blue Eyes of Yonta introduction and post-screening discussion with Flora Gomes and HFA Director Haden Guest.

PRECEDED BY

  • The Return of Amílcar Cabral (O Regresso de Amílcar Cabral)

    Directed by Sana Na N’Hada, José Bolama, Josefina Crato, Djalma Fettermann, Flora Gomes.
    Guinea-Bissau/Guinea/Sweden, 1976, digital video, color, 31 min.
    Portuguese with English subtitles.
    Copy source: Arsenal - Institut für Film und Videokunst e.V.

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The McMillan-Stewart Fellowship: Flora Gomes