GRIGRIS B
Mahamat-Saleh Haroun was born in Chad but fled the country
in the 80’s due to the civil war conflict and relocated in France, where he
worked as a journalist before studying at the Conservatoire Libre du Cinéma in
Paris. Following in the tradition of
African filmmakers from Senegalese Ousmane Sembène to Mauritanian Abderrahmane
Sissako, Haroun uses deceptively quiet surfaces, where his films obscure the
underlying tensions of the region, perhaps most beautifully expressed in his
acclaimed War Trilogy. Returning to Chad
to make films, the locations could be anywhere in Africa, as they always
reflect a postcolonial African society, where in dealing with poverty or family
loss, people are often uprooted and transplanted away from their homelands, struggling
to find their place in the modern world.
Haroun contrasts the moral compromises that result from the challenges
of living in the fast-paced urban life against the distant rural communities
that continue to maintain a link to the traditional past. After concluding his War Trilogy with 2010
Top Ten Films of the Year: #2 A Screaming Man (Un homme qui crie), winner
of the Jury prize at Cannes, Haroun has chosen an odd, almost eccentric
character in Grigris (Souleymane Démé), where in the riveting opening sequence,
we hear a cramped nightclub audience come to life with applause as they chant
his name: “Grigris! Grigris!” The man does not disappoint once he hits the
dance floor, though he has a noticeably imbalanced walk due to a nearly useless
crippled left leg. His flexibility,
however, is abnormal, as is his upper body strength, which allows him to do
high-powered gymnastic moves where his body bends and moves in ways that it
shouldn’t, but his choreographed performance is highly entertaining, enabling
him to earn a few dollars on the side.
Grigris works as an assistant in a storefront photography
studio owned by his uncle (Marius Yelolo), often chided by his wife for smoking
too much, where there’s a wry humor to their family relationship. When the stunningly beautiful Mimi (Anaïs
Monory) steps into the studio looking for fashion model photos, it’s amusing
how the eyes of each man on the street follows her every move, but none more
than Grigris, who thinks she’s the most beautiful women he’s ever seen in his
life. Accordingly, he treats her with
kindness, and catches her eye dancing in the nightclub she frequents, as little
does he know she works as a bar hostess. Though she appears way out of his league, she
takes to him and they become friends, as he views her differently than all the
others who see her only as a commodity.
We watch him rehearse his act on an abandoned stage, where he has dance
aspirations, hoping one day it might take him somewhere. But his dreams are short-lived when his uncle
ends up in the hospital with a whopping medical bill. Desperate to earn fast money, he turns to the
local crime boss for a job, Moussa (Cyril Gueï), a gun-toting gangster that
travels with hired thugs, but also a guy that smuggles black market gasoline
over the border to Cameroon, which involves swimming across the river carrying
the gasoline behind in large plastic containers that are tied together. Grigris nearly drowns in his first attempt,
drawing the ire of his boss, who needs guys he can depend on, contemptuously throwing
Grigris back out onto the street. But he
begs for another chance, claiming he can drive a truck, and is surprisingly
successful in outmaneuvering the chasing police.
When Grigris double-crosses his boss, selling the gasoline
to others, then purposefully injuring himself in an attempt to explain he was
robbed and beaten up by the cops, Moussa and his troops are furious, but he
secretly brings all the cash to his uncle in the hospital. But guys like Moussa aren’t ones to just let
things go, reminiscent of the brutally violent, paramilitary militia of Papa
Doc’s Tonton Macoute in Haiti, marauding gangs with guns
that carry out indiscriminate threats and murders in a vicious reign of
terror. After an amusing Muslim ritual
in front of Moussa with this thugs all dressed in white robes while wearing
dark glasses, Grigris vows, with his hand on the Holy Quran, that he’s telling
the truth, but they beat him up afterwards anyway, contending he’s lying,
giving him two days to return the money or he’ll be shot. Bleeding profusely, he has only Mimi to turn
to, where the two of them go on the run into the outlands to her family’s
village in the bush, where they’re greeted with open arms and immediately
accepted into the community. In an
interesting twist, all the men are away in the fields harvesting crops, so what
we see reflects a simplistic rural lifestyle of people living in huts, but also
a collective mindset of the women, all dressed in vibrant colors, reflecting a
unified spirit. With music by Wasis
Diop, brother of the director Djibril Diop Mambety, there is a gentle
underlying tone of melancholic tenderness, a softer side that contrasts with
the brutally cruel world of the urban male gangsters they’re running from. What governmental structure exists remains
unseen and is largely an invisible presence in ordinary people’s lives, while
Moussa’s anarchistic gang of thugs are the everyday reality ruling the streets,
threatening the safety of everyone.
What’s perhaps most devastating in the film is the continuing presence
of poverty and the horrendous effect this plays in the decisions made by the characters,
who are driven to perform loathsome acts by the surrounding forces of power and
corruption. While flowing with poetic
naturalism, the film doesn’t have the bracing intensity of his earlier films,
but continues to express the splintered disarray left in the wake of
postcolonial Africa.