talking about clash

Sunday, June 22, 2008

I miss the good old european Hip Hop scene these days, the dizzee rascal, roots manuva, Dj Mehdi, TTC, the exhilarating sense of danger and urgency that comes from their music.

Justice has released a Video for Stress, that has made a lot of noise recently.

Produced by Romain Gavras for Kourtrajmé, this video is gritty, violent, disturbing, and ultimately very controversial.

Some people say it reminds them of Man bites dog, personally I think it's more The Warriors meet Clockwork Orange, revisited sauce 2008.
Romain Gavras takes his film making to new heights, without any compromise, the quality of the image and the editing are amazing.
Don't stop at the realism and the violence of the image because you'd be cheated.
If you haven't seen the video, have a look 
here for some screen grabs and an analysis of the action and characters.

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conversations on a sunday afternoon

Thursday, May 29, 2008



Tagged "most important movie of South African cinema", this docu-fiction by
Khalo Matabane is a fascinating journey through the identity of those who populate South Africa today, and  also a reminder that a time when many South Africans are leaving – or considering leaving the country – many people from other countries are drawn here in search of a better future.

The movie follows a young black South African looking for a woman called Fatima. This quest to find the somalian woman he used to see in the park every sunday, and to tell her story, leads him to the encounter of other refugees and immigrants, taking you through downtown Johannesburg with stop in a deportation camp. The result is a collection of points of view towards the country that is housing them, and their journey in finding an identity in their displaced situation.
You begin to realize, listening to the fascinating, eclectic cast of characters,  that had that movie been filmed in Paris or London, you would have come across a similar selection of displaced people. Which says a lot about immigration as a global concept. 

Watching this movie, and being where I am now, witnessing what is happening in South Africa raised a lot of question and thoughts about immigration and identity, but I leave that to another post as it would be too long and the movie his first and foremost a humanist film, not an intellectual one.
All I can say is I wish it could be played, not just in South Africa, but over the world, because it touches issues that really embody the world we live in today, something I tried to do in my own small way (listen to Fish and Chips and Not of this Planet in the playlist, or click here).

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identity

Friday, April 25, 2008

I just found a paragraph of a very good book I red when doing my final major on cultural identity:

"I was hanging around. The question was continually tormenting me, the traditionnal question that is raised in my island, between friends, between people who meet, among all.
Where are your parents from?
Mine are not slaves but what would be the response of those who submitted their feet on a land of slave.
I was hanging around. Troubled deeply."
The anthropophage tree, Jean-Luc Raharimanana.

This book is a huge inspiration in terms of what I want to express through my work, and what I've experienced in the past 4 years.

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hyenes

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Watching tv I just switched channel and was captivate by the beauty of the images I saw.
This film is called Hyenes and is from a Senegalese director who goes by the name of Djibril Diop Mambety.

The soundtrack was done by his brother and is also amazing.
You can listen to the title track in the playlist.

Wasis Diop, Hyenes Soundtrack:

I asked my mother and father permission
To travel round the world and now I’m back
I’ve seen everything you can imagine
From burglaries to assassination
I asked my parent’s permission

The Ramatou bird flew off and returned
I asked my parent’s permission
The Ramatou bird flew off and returned
All the boys have been circumcised by the elders

Get up and work
Get up and work in the fields
Get up and work the soil
Get to work and stop talking

If you don’t get up in good time and start work
How will you find your freedom?

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jazz in Jo'burg

Saturday, March 29, 2008

jo'burg by and large

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

apartheid museum

Monday, March 24, 2008