Omen (augure) Review Baloji Offers Secrets And Sorcery In Congolese Homecoming

11 Days(s) Ago    👁 48
omen augure review baloji offers secrets and sorcery in congolese homecoming
Musician and film-makers story about a Belgian-Congolese man who takes his white wife to DRC to meet the family is complex, risky and bold Congolese-born (n Serge Baloji Tshiani) was a prizewinner at Cannes last year with this feature directing debut: a dynamic, teemingly populated, multistranded and tonally elusive picture which I initially thought would benefit from comparisons with Jordan Peeles horror classic Get Out. In fact, its more complicated than that. Koffi (Marc Zinga) is a Congolese man living in Belgium and married to a white woman, Alice (Lucie Debay). They are about to have twins and Koffi feels that he cannot put it off any further: whatever his family will think, the couple must journey back to the Democratic Republic of the Congo to let them see Alice and let them get used to the idea. It particularly means propitiating his fiercely conservative mother Mujila (Yves-Marina Gnahoua). He takes care to shave off his westernised afro, and even brings them a financial tribute, or dowry, of thousands of euros.