词条 | Adanggaman |
释义 |
| name = Adanggaman | image =Andanggaman.jpg | image_size = | caption = | director = Roger Gnoan M'Bala | producer = Tiziana Soudani | writer = Jean-Marie Adiaffi, Bertin Akaffou | narrator = | starring = | music = Lokua Kanza | cinematography = Mohammed Soudani | editing = Monica Goux | distributor =New Yorker Films (United States) | released = September 21, 2001 (Italy) | runtime = | country = Ivory Coast Burkina Faso Switzerland Italy France | language = Bambara, Baoulé, French | budget = | preceded_by = | followed_by = }} Andanggaman is a 2000 historical drama film directed by Roger Gnoan M'Bala. It was an international co-production between the Ivory Coast, Burkina Faso, Switzerland, Italy and France. PlotIn West Africa in 1685, King Adanggaman leads a war against his neighboring ethnic groups, ordering his soldiers to torch enemy villages, kill the elderly and capture the healthy to sell to the European slave traders. When his village falls prey to one of Adanggaman's attacks, Ossei manages to escape, but his family is murdered except for his captured mother. Chasing after the soldiers in an effort to free her, Ossei is befriended by a fierce warrior named Naka. At Adanggaman's court, Ossei makes friends with a healer/seer, who was captured as a boy from his village/people by Adanggaman's empire. He heals some wounds that Ossei gained when travelling to Adanggaman, and reveals through his fortune-telling abilities that the future of all in the empire would be bleak for a long time, subject to slavery and oppression. The healer sees his daughter at the court (Naka), who doesn't acknowledge him initially, but recalls her childhood with him guiding her as his only daughter. The seer protests to King Adanngaman, who in turn for his perceived insolence, orders him and Ossei to be sold as slaves. The healer dies whilst in captivity, overcome by disbelief, grief and abandonment. In the end, Ossei leaves Naka, after the two escape, become close friends, and form a household. He goes travelling, to forge a new life, but is captured by soldiers of Adangamaan's court and thus prepped for sale into slavery. He is sold to Europeans, who transport him to the Americas via the Middle Passage, and is renamed John Stanford by a wealthy plantation owner. He dies at age 70, having five children with a slave woman. King Adangaaman is captured by his aides whilst drunk from rum, and in turn sold to Europeans. He becomes a slave in St. Louis, and is a cook to Europeans there, being given the name Walter Brown. He dies in 1698 from tuberculosis. Cast
AwardsIn 2000, Andanggaman won the Best Actor and Special Jury Award at the Amiens International Film Festival. The following year it won the Special Jury Award at the Marrakech International Film Festival and the awards for Best Actress and Best Cinematography at the Ouagadougou Panafrican Film and Television Festival.[1] References1. ^{{cite web | title =Awards for Adanggaman | publisher =Internet Movie Database | url =https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0262210/awards | accessdate =2002-12-29 }} External links
13 : 2000 films|Bambara-language films|Ivorian films|Burkinabé films|Films about royalty|Films about slavery|Films set in Africa|French films|French-language films|Films set in the 1680s|Swiss films|2000s drama films|Films set in pre-colonial sub-Saharan Africa |
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