Emitaï | Telescope Film
Emitaï

Emitaï

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During World War II, the Vichy government conscripts men from France's colonies. A revolt breaks out in a Diola village unfolding simultaneously to the resistance fighting in metropolitan France. When the metropole is liberated, the village sees portraits of de Gaulle replacing posters of Pétain, but the village's circumstances remain unchanged.

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What are critics saying?

100

Seattle Post-Intelligencer by Sean Axmaker

Emitai (1971) remains Sembene's masterpiece and his most important achievement. [03 Aug 2001]

83

Baltimore Sun by Ann Hornaday

Without a note of music or any other extraneous narrative device, Emitai plunges the viewer deep into the lives of the Diola, to the point where the subtitles translating the Diola and French languages are almost superfluous. [02 Feb 1998]

80

Time Out

Sembene makes his point with a humour all the more powerful for the anger it induces at the genocidal antics of the whites. A conventional film, but it succeeds in its aim, clarifying the logic of the colonial struggle through a specific example.

80

Village Voice

As usual with Sembene, there is much fascinating ethnological detail; more importantly, this is a film by an African for Africans, designed to make them share discovery and revelation: the limitations of myth, the cruelty of the oppressor, the fortitude of the people, the need for revolution. [22 Jun 1972, p.75]

80

The New York Times

It is a cool, balanced, proportionate spirit, affectionate but unillusioned, and wonderfully suited to the intricacies (and the idiosyncracies) of the subject matter. Sembene does not grab you; he engages you.

80

The New York Times by Roger Greenspun

It is a cool, balanced, proportionate spirit, affectionate but unillusioned, and wonderfully suited to the intricacies (and the idiosyncracies) of the subject matter. Sembene does not grab you; he engages you.

80

Village Voice by Amos Vogel

As usual with Sembene, there is much fascinating ethnological detail; more importantly, this is a film by an African for Africans, designed to make them share discovery and revelation: the limitations of myth, the cruelty of the oppressor, the fortitude of the people, the need for revolution. [22 Jun 1972, p.75]

80

Time Out by Staff (Not Credited)

Sembene makes his point with a humour all the more powerful for the anger it induces at the genocidal antics of the whites. A conventional film, but it succeeds in its aim, clarifying the logic of the colonial struggle through a specific example.

60

The New Yorker by Pauline Kael

Ousmane Sembene's approach is thoughtful and almost reticent; the viewer contemplates a series of tragic dilemmas. Yet for all its intelligence, the movie isn't memorable--partly because the last section is unsatisfying.