Sarraounia | |
---|---|
Directed by | Med Hondo |
Produced by | Med Hondo |
Written by | Med Hondo Abdoulaye Mamani |
Starring | Aï Keïta |
Music by |
Pierre Akendengué Abdoulaye Cissé Issouf Compaore |
Cinematography | Guy Famechon |
Edited by | Marie-Thérèse Boiché |
Production
company |
|
Release date
|
November 26, 1986 | (France)
Running time
|
120 minutes |
Country |
Burkina Faso Mauritania France |
Language | Dioula, Fula, French |
Budget | $3,000,000 |
Sarraounia is a 1986 historical drama film written and directed by Med Hondo. It is based on a novel of the same name by Nigerien author Abdoulaye Mamani, who co-wrote the screenplay. The novel and film concern the real-life Battle of Lougou between Azna (remnant animist-Hausa people) queen Sarraounia and the advancing French Colonial Forces of the Voulet-Chanoine Mission in 1899. Sarraounia was one of the few African tribal leaders that resisted the advances of French expansionists Paul Voulet and Julien Chanoine. The film won the first prize at the Panafrican Film and Television Festival of Ouagadougou (FESPACO) and was critically well received.
The film takes place in Niger and the surrounding region of the Sahel. It begins with the initiation and establishment as queen of the Aznas of a young girl. The young queen, Sarraounia, becomes an accomplished warrior when she defends her tribe from an enemy tribe. Accomplished in archery and herbalism, she is a renowned sorceress. Meanwhile, French colonialists Paul Voulet and Julien Chanoine set out to conquer new lands for the French colonial empire. As they advance across the land they rape women and leave burning villages in their wake.