Telluride 2008 Festival
Advertisement
Sign in
Username   Password         Forgot password?
Wanna join? Tour Spout | Sign up
Mama Africa: Growing Up Urban
  • 0
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • Rate this movie.

trailerWatch trailer

Rent it, watch it, find it

Advertisement
Mama Africa, hosted by rapper/actress Queen Latifah, combines three short films, directed by African women, telling tales of misguided youth in contemporary Africa. In Uno's World, from Namibia and directed by Bridget Pickering, Uno (Sophie David), a sexually inexperienced young woman, gets involved with a womanizer, Kaura (Muhindua Kaura), which leads to an unplanned pregnancy. When Kaura refuses to take responsibility for their child, and starts avoiding Uno, she leaves the baby in the care of her mother and goes to dangerous lengths to track Kaura down. In Hang Time, from Nigerian filmmaker Ngozi Onwurah (Welcome II the Terrordome), Kwame (Brian Biragi), a talented basketball player, in desperate need of a new pair of sneakers, and nervous about the imminent arrival of a basketball scout from America, decides to do a job for a slick-talking local gangster, Olu (Brian Bovell), to make some quick cash. The last film of the trilogy, Raya, comes from South Africa and was directed by Zulfah Otto-Sallies. The title character (Rehane Abrahams) is a smart but troubled young woman who has just been released from prison after several years. Raya goes to the home of her mother, Salaama (Denise Newman), a devout Muslim, who has been taking care of Raya's daughter, Madeegah (Ayesha Meer Krige). An independent modern woman unable to live by her mother's rules, Raya takes Madeegah away, telling Salaama, "You're not going to keep her under a veil all her life." But when Raya finds herself unable to get a job because of her criminal record, she's tempted to return to crime to provide for her daughter. These three 26-minute films were selected from a longer program of six such films produced by the African companies Zimmedia and M-Net. All three films are in English. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide
[more]

Be the first to review this movie!

Write a review

Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
Mama Africa is a consistently interesting and well-made African episode film, only slightly marred by occasional lapses into a rather simplistic moralism. Of the three shorts, Hang Time, directed by Ngozi Onwurah (the most experienced director of the three), is the slickest, most well written, and most interesting thematically. Kwame (Brian Biragi) is a talented and driven teen who feels he can't rely on his father, who spends long periods away from home working on an oil rig. Onwurah does a good job of setting up Kwame's decision to turn to criminality in order to buy the sneakers he needs to impress an American basketball scout. Biragi is appealing in the lead. While the tragedy that befalls Kwame will seem contrived to some, his younger sister's (Hilja Lindsay-Parkinson) pragmatic response to that tragedy hits home with its blunt honesty. In Uno's World, director Bridget Pickering does a good job in frankly portraying how a rebellious teenage girl gets into more trouble than she is emotionally prepared to handle. This character study has a true-to-life feel in its depiction of the resourceful but irresponsible Uno (Sophie David) and her social milieu. Raya is the most problematic of the three films, despite an engaging and charismatic performance by Rehane Abrahams in the title role. While director Zulfah Otto-Sallies seems to sympathize with Raya's rejection of her mother's religious beliefs, which Raya understandably finds oppressive, the film falls into the trap of depicting Raya's later problems as a direct result of her choosing an independent life. Similarly to the main characters in the other two films, Raya is between a rock and a hard place, but the difficult decisions she makes are more understandable. Taken as a whole, Mama Africa entertainingly and movingly shows a world Western audiences have rarely seen. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide
 

Community ratings

mavens
Spout mavens
haven't rated it
most people
Most people
haven't rated it

Other opinions