For a filmmaker who believed in giving Africans their own voice, it seems appropriate to offer such an unvarnished portrait.
What are people saying?
What are critics saying?
Village Voice by Alan Scherstuhl
Jason Silverman and Samba Gadjigo's heartfelt doc is rich in footage and access.
Slant Magazine by Clayton Dillard
The film unfolds as a kind, politically soft offering of what lies beneath both Sembène's films and the man himself.
Utilitarian in construction but personally invested, it’s a duly humble career overview that doesn’t risk much individual interpretation of such rich, essential films as “Black Girl,” “Xala” and “Moolaade” — though it should leave viewers eager to make (or regain) their acquaintance.
RogerEbert.com by Matt Zoller Seitz
Sembene! is most illuminating when it is simply showing us clips from the director's features and behind-the-scenes or "making of" footage, with very little in the way of verbal setup, and then letting them play out.
Los Angeles Times by Michael Rechtshaffen
A richly crafted documentary that serves as an enlightening tribute to the filmmaker who masterfully tapped into the medium's wide-reaching socio-political potential.
The New York Times by Nicolas Rapold
Mr. Sembène was an inspiration; as a film, Sembène! is something less than that, petering out as it goes on, but at least offering a fair-minded tribute to a master.
The Hollywood Reporter by Todd McCarthy
Academic in its approach but very informative as well as surprising in the degree to which it addresses the man's foibles and ethical shortcomings, the film turns a welcome spotlight on a resourceful and singular artist who was forced to do everything from scratch in the absence of any local industry infrastructure.