XALA - A Review of the Film "Curse"

A Review of the Film "Curse

By Talibah Newman, published Sep 29, 2006
Published Content: 9  Total Views: 16,007  Favorited By: 0 CPs
Rating: 3.0 of 5
Xala: women representative of the generational transitions of Senegal

Xala  is a perfect illustration of the underdeveloped middle class and its staggering flaws. The film is an allegorical tale of corruption told with simplicity and is inundated with satire exposing the emerging neo-colonial bourgeoisie. The story is of an African businessman recently elected to the Chamber of Commerce in1960 during the initial onslaught of independence in Senegal.  El Hadji Abdou Kader Bèye has been inflicted with the xala on his wedding night with his third wife, Ngone. His impotence parallels the same cultural affliction emerging within Africa’s post-colonial and post-independence society of nouveaux riches, its peasants, beggars, and the unemployed. The pseudo-bourgeoisie is crippled by selfish motives to trade with Europeans and exploit local Africans. According to Frantz Fanon’s theory of post-coloniality:

Closing the road to the national bourgeoisie is, certainly, the means whereby the vicissitudes of newfound independence may be avoided… But it is also the only means toward progress. 

Takeaways
  • The last scene of Xala is important because both the traditional and the modern, politically commit
  • Xala is a perfect illustration of the underdeveloped middle class and its staggering flaws.
  • Instead of making productive investments in his community El Hadji exploits the local people while t
Did You Know?
The story is of an African businessman recently elected to the Chamber of Commerce in1960 during the initial onslaught of independence in Senegal.
Resources
  • Xala. Dir. Ousmane Sembene. Filmi Domireew/Societe Nationale de Cinema (Senegal)1974.
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