Camp de Thiaroye | |
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Directed by | Ousmane Sembène Thierno Faty Sow |
Written by | Ousmane Sembène Thierno Faty Sow |
Produced by | Mustafa Ben Jemja Ouzid Dahmane Mamadou Mbengue |
Cinematography | Smaïl Lakhdar-Hamina |
Edited by | Kahéna Attia |
Music by | Ismaël Lô |
Production companies | Enaproc Filmi Domirev Films Kajoor Satpec Société Nouvelle Pathé Cinéma |
Distributed by | New Yorker Films |
Release date |
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Running time | 157 minutes |
Country | Senegal |
Languages |
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Camp de Thiaroye ([kɑ̃ də tjaʁ.wa]; also known as The Camp at Thiaroye) is a 1988 Senegalese war-drama film written and directed by Ousmane Sembène and Thierno Faty Sow.
The film entered the competition at the 45th Venice International Film Festival, in which it won the Grand Jury Prize.[1] The film depicts the Thiaroye massacre, which happened in Thiaroye, Dakar, in 1944.
The film is about the mutiny by and mass killing of French West African troops by French forces on the night of November 30 to December 1, 1944. West African conscripts were protesting poor conditions and revocation of pay at the Thiaroye camp. The film is a criticism and indictment of the French colonial system.[2]
The film documents the events leading up to the Thiaroye massacre, as well as the massacre itself. The film received positive reviews at the time it was released and continues to be heralded by scholars as an important historical documentation of the Thiaroye massacre.[3][4]
The film was banned in France for a decade and censored in Senegal as well.[5]