May 11

AFRICAN VISIONS: A COLLABORATION WITH THE HUMAN RIGHTS ARTS & FILM FESTIVAL

7:00PM – BLACK GIRL
Ousmane Sembène (1966) 65 mins
Unclassified 15+ Unless accompanied by an adult

One of the founding works of African cinema; Senegalese director Sembène’s first feature is a strikingly complex exploration of racial and cultural prejudice that combines the social-realist project of neo-realism with the spare but freewheeling aesthetics of the nouvelle vague. Based on a real event, this pioneering postcolonial film follows a young Senegalese woman who moves from Dakar to the Riviera, first as nanny and then maid to a French family.

CTEQ ANNOTATION:
‘Introduction to Black Girl’ by Rahul Hamid.

Preceded by

Borom sarret (1963) 22 mins.
Unclassified 15+ Unless accompanied by an adult
This tale of an impoverished cart driver in Dakar is widely considered to be the first film made by a black African in Africa.

Both films have been restored by The Film Foundation World Cinema Project, courtesy of Fondazione Cineteca di Bologna.


8:40PM – PETIT À PETIT
Jean Rouch (1970) 96 mins
Unclassified 15+ Unless accompanied by an adult

Rouch’s “sequel” to the celebrated Jaguar is in many ways a more profound, playful and ambitious work of “ethno-fiction”. Several young men from the city of Niamey in Niger visit Paris to undertake an ethnographic study of high-rise buildings and the uses Parisians make of them. Made in the wake of May ’68, Rouch’s bracing combination of improvised fiction and observational documentary is a key work of postcolonial cinema and a profound instance of “reverse” ethnography. Parisians are held up as objects of study, reworking many of the devices—observations on style and manners, callipers to measure anatomy—familiar from colonialism.


Artists and creatives have always been at the vanguard of social change—we rely on them to hold a mirror to the uneasy truths of our times and reflect our stories,” the Human Rights Arts & Film Festival mission statement reads.

The same reasoning could be said to underlie the Melbourne Cinémathèque’s commitment to screening significant films from the complete history of cinema; from the earliest silent films to recent digital experimentations, cinema is a bellwether of our direction in the world.

In the continuation of a partnership formed in 2014, this screening shows cinema to be a truly global art form. It begins with Senegalese director Ousmane Sembène’s visionary debut feature before turning the colonial gaze back onto its European origins in Jean Rouch’s fittingly collaborative film Petit à Petit.

hraff

7 February
OPENING NIGHT 2024

7 February – 21 February
FROM THE BOULEVARDS OF PARIS TO THE DOCKS OF CHERBOURG: LANDMARKS OF THE FRENCH FILM MUSICAL

28 February – 13 March
'LIVING MAY BE TRAGIC, BUT LIFE ISN'T': THE FILMS OF THE TAVIANI BROTHERS

20 March – 3 April
IN THE AFTERGLOW: THE MERCURIAL STARDOM OF GLORIA GRAHAME

Wednesday 10 April
MAN OF THE CINEMA: A TRIBUTE TO JOHN FLAUS AT 90

17 April – 1 May
KEEP ROLLING: ANN HUI'S COUNTER-CINEMA

8 May – 22 May
"ALL ART IS ONE": THE VISIONARY CINEMA OF MICHAEL POWELL AND EMERIC PRESSBURGER

29 May – 12 June
WRITING WITH HER EYES: SUSO CECCHI D'AMICO, SCREENWRITER AS OBSERVER

19 June – 3 July
THE HOUSE THAT MOHSEN BUILT: THE FILMS OF SAMIRA MAKHMALBAF, MARZIEH MESHKINI AND MOHSEN MAKHMALBAF

10 July – 24 July
THE PAIN OF LIVING: JEAN EUSTACHE, BEING CINEMA

Wednesday 31 July
BETWEEN THE WAVE AND REVOLUTION: THE RETURN OF RIVETTE’S LEGENDARY L’AMOUR FOU

4–18 September
BLIND BEASTS, RED ANGELS AND HOODLUM SOLDIERS: THE IRRESISTIBLE CINEMA OF YASUZO MASUMURA

25 September – 9 October
JIŘÍ MENZEL: MAKING COMEDIES IS NO FUN

16–23 October
OF MEN AND MONSTERS: THE CINEMA OF NIKOS KOUNDOUROS

Wednesday 30 October
CONTESTED HISTORIES: THE DOCUMENTARIES OF JENI THORNLEY

6–20 November
THE FIRST AND LAST OF ENGLAND: THE QUEER LEGACIES OF DEREK JARMAN

Wednesday 27 November
PARADING THE PAST: RECENT ERNST LUBITSCH RESTORATIONS

4–11 December
THE SEEDS OF CHANGE: THE DOCUMENTARIES OF TOM ZUBRYCKI

Wednesday 18 December
CARLTON AND BEYOND: THE MELBOURNE UNIVERSITY FILM SOCIETY IN THE 1960s