Mati Diop On Being The First Black Female Director In Cannes
Director Mati Diop poses for photographers at the photo call for the film 'Atlantique' at the 72nd international film festival, Cannes, southern France, Friday, May 17, 2019. (Photo by Arthur Mola/Invision/AP)
BY JAKE COYLE
CANNES, FRANCE (AP) ā Mati Diop was initially disappointed when she, by reading a news article, discovered that she was the first black female filmmaker in the Cannes Film Festivalās prestigious competition in its 72-year history.
āI hadnāt realized myself. I didnāt know,ā the 36-year-old French-Senegalese filmmaker said in an interview. āMy first reaction is that I found it quite sad. I thought, āOh, is it?ā So thereās still a long way to go before it becomes something completely natural and normal and something thatās not noticeable, the fact that Iām a black woman.ā
Diopās milestone has been enthusiastically celebrated in Cannes, where she on Thursday premiered her feature film debut āAtlantics.ā The film, which is competing for Cannesā top honor, the Palme dāOr, focuses on the women left behind in Dakar when many of the local young men flee Senegal for Spain by boat, unable to make a living at home.
But for Diop, her unique position in Cannes is a perplexing distinction.
āWhat I realized, and Iām not used to this feeling, is that it happened to me. Iām not responsible for that. I havenāt done anything specific for that. Iāve just made the film I wanted to make,ā said Diop. āIām not embarrassed. Iām not proud. I just take it as a pure fact.ā
āAtlanticsā marks Diopās first feature as a director, but sheās previously made five shorts, one of which was the basis for her Cannes entry. That 2009 short bore the same title but a different perspective, concentrating on a young man forced into a dangerous migration.
āI was myself a witness of the situation, quite a close witness,ā said the Paris-based Diop, who 10 years ago visited her family in Senegal. āIt was 10 years ago that there was this whole wave of a young generation who were trying to flee. They went toward Spain and many of them disappeared. I needed to tell this story. I had already dealt with it in my short but I felt I wasnāt done with it.ā
Diop links her reconnection with Senegal to her birth as a filmmaker. She is the daughter of Senegalese jazz musician Wasis Diop and niece of the pioneering Senegalese director Djibril Diop MambĆ©ty (āTouki Boukiā). Diopās 2013 documentary āA Thousand Sunsā examined her uncleās legacy and his 1972 film, considered a cornerstone of African cinema.
CANNES, FRANCE (AP) ā Mati Diop was initially disappointed when she, by reading a news article, discovered that she was the first black female filmmaker in the Cannes Film Festivalās prestigious competition in its 72-year history.
āI hadnāt realized myself. I didnāt know,ā the 36-year-old French-Senegalese filmmaker said in an interview. āMy first reaction is that I found it quite sad. I thought, āOh, is it?ā So thereās still a long way to go before it becomes something completely natural and normal and something thatās not noticeable, the fact that Iām a black woman.ā
Diopās milestone has been enthusiastically celebrated in Cannes, where she on Thursday premiered her feature film debut āAtlantics.ā The film, which is competing for Cannesā top honor, the Palme dāOr, focuses on the women left behind in Dakar when many of the local young men flee Senegal for Spain by boat, unable to make a living at home.
But for Diop, her unique position in Cannes is a perplexing distinction.
āWhat I realized, and Iām not used to this feeling, is that it happened to me. Iām not responsible for that. I havenāt done anything specific for that. Iāve just made the film I wanted to make,ā said Diop. āIām not embarrassed. Iām not proud. I just take it as a pure fact.ā
āAtlanticsā marks Diopās first feature as a director, but sheās previously made five shorts, one of which was the basis for her Cannes entry. That 2009 short bore the same title but a different perspective, concentrating on a young man forced into a dangerous migration.
āI was myself a witness of the situation, quite a close witness,ā said the Paris-based Diop, who 10 years ago visited her family in Senegal. āIt was 10 years ago that there was this whole wave of a young generation who were trying to flee. They went toward Spain and many of them disappeared. I needed to tell this story. I had already dealt with it in my short but I felt I wasnāt done with it.ā
Diop links her reconnection with Senegal to her birth as a filmmaker. She is the daughter of Senegalese jazz musician Wasis Diop and niece of the pioneering Senegalese director Djibril Diop MambĆ©ty (āTouki Boukiā). Diopās 2013 documentary āA Thousand Sunsā examined her uncleās legacy and his 1972 film, considered a cornerstone of African cinema.
Writer director Mati Diop, fifth from left, poses with cast and crew upon arrival at the premiere of the film 'Atlantique' at the 72nd international film festival, Cannes, southern France, Thursday, May 16, 2019. (AP Photo/Petros Giannakouris)
Diop has gradually formed her own aesthetic, one that sometimes bleeds documentary and fiction. A friend called āAtlantiqueā ā³a fantasy documentary.ā Diop prefers āa contemplative action film.ā
āIt was written as a fiction but I donāt make this limit. I donāt think itās our business as filmmakers to draw these limits between documentaries and fiction. When you have the desire to make a film, you make a film,ā she says. āThe reality that I described is so anchored in social and political and economic terms, of course there is a real texture and embodiment of the subject and my approach it in it that can be documentary-like.ā
āAtlanticsā is also dazzlingly otherworldly, with waves of sorrow washing up on Dakar shores. Mama Sane plays Ada, whose boyfriend, along with his shipmates, vanish at sea. After, a mysterious specter haunts many of those who drove the young men away. Diop compares the tale to āUlysses.ā
āItās a misunderstanding to consider Penelope (of āUlyssesā) a passive figure whoās just waiting for her beloved to come back,ā said Diop. āWhat I found interesting is that although these women are waiting for these men to come, their life is transformed by the experience of this loss. Itās how these women can reconquer their own life and reach a certain level of emancipation through the loss they experience.ā
Diop has gradually come to terms with her history-making status in Cannes. On Friday, she told reporters that maybe she is a little proud, and noted that Jordan Peeleās films (āUs,ā ā³Get Outā) have been enthralling for her. In the interview, she cited Sofia Coppolaās āThe Virgin Suicidesā as a guidepost to her.
āI must acknowledge that myself, when I was growing up, I didnāt have a black or mixed race filmmaker who would have been inspirational to me,ā said Diop. āItās important to have these kinds of figures. So if I may someday become a kind of figure like to for younger women, then that would be wonderful. So I think it does matter.ā
Follow AP Film Writer Jake Coyle on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/jakecoyleAP
Diop has gradually formed her own aesthetic, one that sometimes bleeds documentary and fiction. A friend called āAtlantiqueā ā³a fantasy documentary.ā Diop prefers āa contemplative action film.ā
āIt was written as a fiction but I donāt make this limit. I donāt think itās our business as filmmakers to draw these limits between documentaries and fiction. When you have the desire to make a film, you make a film,ā she says. āThe reality that I described is so anchored in social and political and economic terms, of course there is a real texture and embodiment of the subject and my approach it in it that can be documentary-like.ā
āAtlanticsā is also dazzlingly otherworldly, with waves of sorrow washing up on Dakar shores. Mama Sane plays Ada, whose boyfriend, along with his shipmates, vanish at sea. After, a mysterious specter haunts many of those who drove the young men away. Diop compares the tale to āUlysses.ā
āItās a misunderstanding to consider Penelope (of āUlyssesā) a passive figure whoās just waiting for her beloved to come back,ā said Diop. āWhat I found interesting is that although these women are waiting for these men to come, their life is transformed by the experience of this loss. Itās how these women can reconquer their own life and reach a certain level of emancipation through the loss they experience.ā
Diop has gradually come to terms with her history-making status in Cannes. On Friday, she told reporters that maybe she is a little proud, and noted that Jordan Peeleās films (āUs,ā ā³Get Outā) have been enthralling for her. In the interview, she cited Sofia Coppolaās āThe Virgin Suicidesā as a guidepost to her.
āI must acknowledge that myself, when I was growing up, I didnāt have a black or mixed race filmmaker who would have been inspirational to me,ā said Diop. āItās important to have these kinds of figures. So if I may someday become a kind of figure like to for younger women, then that would be wonderful. So I think it does matter.ā
Follow AP Film Writer Jake Coyle on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/jakecoyleAP
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