La maladie du sommeil
Avec Pierre Bokma, Jean-Christophe Folly, Jenny Schily, Hippolyte Girardot, Maria Elise Miller, Sava Lolov, Francis Noukiatchom, Ali Mvondo, Isacar Yinkou, Ali Barkai
Synopsis
The German New Wave is nearly ten years old now. High time it started looking elsewhere? This is what Ulrich Köhler – after already being noticed and hailed for his Bungalow and Montag – is doing here. He has centred the action for this film in Cameroon, in Yaoundé. The synopsis is minimal: Ebbo, a German doctor, is running a centre designed to combat sleeping sickness. Being deeply attached to Africa, he refuses to follow his wife, who wants to go back to Germany. A few years later, a French-Congolese doctor, Alex, sets off to meet Ebbo. Köhler knows Africa well, as his parents lived there for years. The film owes a good deal to this experience: to the multiplicity of languages, perceptions and exiles, to the humour which propels situations, to the heat which both slows down and heightens emotions. There is indecision as the title suggests, but there is also irony, grating worries, some vestiges of colonial history, to which are added the pain of an intimate story. Africa looks at Europe, Europe looks at Africa and the actors themselves are from all over – Pierre Bokno from Holland, Hyppolite Girardot from France and Jenny Schiller from Germany. In addition, the bewitching quality of La Maladie du Sommeil stems – and this is not the least of its paradoxes – from the way it is bound to awake and arouse its audience.