Benda Bilili!

Benda Bilili!
Directed byRenaud Barret
Florent de La Tullaye
Screenplay byRenaud Barret
Florent de La Tullaye
Produced byScreenrunner
La Belle Kinoise
CinematographyFlorent de La Tullaye Renaud Barret
Edited byJean-Christophe Hym
Music byStaff Benda Bilili
Release date
  • 2010 (2010)
Running time
84 minutes
CountriesDemocratic Republic of the Congo
France
LanguagesFrench
Lingala
Box officeUS$127,362

Benda Bilili! is a 2010 documentary by Renaud Barret and Florent de La Tullaye, produced by Yves Chanvillard and Nadim Cheikhrouha (Screenrunner).

The film follows the Kinshasa street musician group Staff Benda Bilili, whose core members of the group are disabled due to polio. "Benda Bilili" means "look beyond appearances" in Lingala.

Renaud Barret and partner Florent de La Tullaye first spotted the group performing on the streets of Kinshasa in 2004. The shooting lasted 5 years until the Staff Benda Bilili became worldwide acclaimed. Amid this larger arc of triumph over adversity, it's Barret and de La Tullaye's joint eye for smaller personal and environmental details that keep the film witty and surprising: the camera captures the social cut-and-thrust of urban Kinshasa, before reflecting the group's wonder at a wider world they previously imagined only in mythic terms. In Benda Bilili!, the sense of discovery between subject and audience is thrillingly mutual.

Benda Bilili! received standing ovations when it opened at the 2010 Cannes Film Festival, with the group in attendance, and performing at the Directors' Fortnight opening party.[1]

The film opened in American theatres in 2011, although a planned U.S. tour in conjunction with the film had to be canceled due to passport problems.[2]

  1. ^ Culshaw, Peter (23 March 2011). "Accidental big-screen heroes". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 23 March 2011.
  2. ^ Hochman, Steve (17 March 2012). "'Benda Bilili!' documentary details the band's difficult lives". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 17 March 2012.