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	<title>Works of Ogechi Mgbudem(obi)</title>
	<link>https://mgbudemobi.com</link>
	<description>Works of Ogechi Mgbudem(obi)</description>
	<pubDate>Wed, 30 Dec 2020 17:37:44 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>Slideshow</title>
				
		<link>https://mgbudemobi.com/Slideshow</link>

		<pubDate>Wed, 30 Dec 2020 17:37:40 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>Works of Ogechi Mgbudem(obi)</dc:creator>

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		<description>Ogechi Mgbudem(obi)is creating images and stories.









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		<title>Text</title>
				
		<link>https://mgbudemobi.com/Text</link>

		<pubDate>Wed, 30 Dec 2020 17:37:41 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>Works of Ogechi Mgbudem(obi)</dc:creator>

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		<description>
	
Hello, welcome. Stay a while.

This is the portfolio website of Ogechi Mgbudem(obi), writer and photographer. All work on this site belongs to the artist. 


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		<title>Featured Projects</title>
				
		<link>https://mgbudemobi.com/Featured-Projects</link>

		<pubDate>Wed, 30 Dec 2020 17:37:40 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>Works of Ogechi Mgbudem(obi)</dc:creator>

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		<description>
	Read my story The American Dream in Arboreal Magazine





























Work Archive ︎
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	<item>
		<title>Plain Air Photography</title>
				
		<link>https://mgbudemobi.com/Plain-Air-Photography</link>

		<pubDate>Wed, 30 Dec 2020 17:37:41 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>Works of Ogechi Mgbudem(obi)</dc:creator>

		<guid isPermaLink="true">https://mgbudemobi.com/Plain-Air-Photography</guid>

		<description>
&#60;img width="4272" height="2848" width_o="4272" height_o="2848" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/878fb761ab90cd4dacbbadc22519dffbf346f035792cb8f4d53ba0f84707fb06/IMG_1888.JPG" data-mid="95238138" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/878fb761ab90cd4dacbbadc22519dffbf346f035792cb8f4d53ba0f84707fb06/IMG_1888.JPG" /&#62;
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Plain Air Photography
A short survey of observations on the world.

&#60;img width="4272" height="2848" width_o="4272" height_o="2848" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/9ddd132070d0231e89d1ac4e6aedf7bb49d39e2c1ef83111a278b924fd2d8885/IMG_1438.JPG" data-mid="101893800" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/9ddd132070d0231e89d1ac4e6aedf7bb49d39e2c1ef83111a278b924fd2d8885/IMG_1438.JPG" /&#62;



&#60;img width="4272" height="2848" width_o="4272" height_o="2848" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/d66ad07be37fc5bcc8714bb8d8b6c3a6d1d7bdf1e95a8366d0727660792d63b4/IMG_0661.JPG" data-mid="101900012" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/d66ad07be37fc5bcc8714bb8d8b6c3a6d1d7bdf1e95a8366d0727660792d63b4/IMG_0661.JPG" /&#62;
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&#60;img width="2848" height="4272" width_o="2848" height_o="4272" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/610bc9dcd07f4188dbc74e184db7193be4e51f64c97b2cf7e5d74e308eab64ff/IMG_1166.JPG" data-mid="101993223" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/610bc9dcd07f4188dbc74e184db7193be4e51f64c97b2cf7e5d74e308eab64ff/IMG_1166.JPG" /&#62;



&#60;img width="4272" height="2848" width_o="4272" height_o="2848" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/ce9f84e0b3fea79c8a13664f255f2bd8484e9763c51a9c486f1b07e6628b29df/IMG_0770.JPG" data-mid="197409833" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/ce9f84e0b3fea79c8a13664f255f2bd8484e9763c51a9c486f1b07e6628b29df/IMG_0770.JPG" /&#62;
&#60;img width="4272" height="2848" width_o="4272" height_o="2848" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/ff991cf14b30b02d90994e418e081a8c35dd160446cf6c47456ba9b697ebaabf/IMG_0779.JPG" data-mid="197409672" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/ff991cf14b30b02d90994e418e081a8c35dd160446cf6c47456ba9b697ebaabf/IMG_0779.JPG" /&#62;
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		<title>Studio Photography</title>
				
		<link>https://mgbudemobi.com/Studio-Photography</link>

		<pubDate>Wed, 30 Dec 2020 17:37:42 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>Works of Ogechi Mgbudem(obi)</dc:creator>

		<guid isPermaLink="true">https://mgbudemobi.com/Studio-Photography</guid>

		<description>
	&#60;img width="1888" height="2614" width_o="1888" height_o="2614" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/67e4b30e5b41a6d2623978727b0b0c2bd1da82c7326da4932d8b2adaa46d5e96/Composite.jpg" data-mid="101889511" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/67e4b30e5b41a6d2623978727b0b0c2bd1da82c7326da4932d8b2adaa46d5e96/Composite.jpg" /&#62;A small display of technical and experimental flash studio work.
	

&#60;img width="4950" height="3300" width_o="4950" height_o="3300" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/b4360ae41bd8527f10fc077e9d2c936879762b464f1dd2172a354da8baea4c9a/LastSupper.jpg" data-mid="95239935" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/b4360ae41bd8527f10fc077e9d2c936879762b464f1dd2172a354da8baea4c9a/LastSupper.jpg" /&#62;&#60;img width="4272" height="2848" width_o="4272" height_o="2848" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/939eabfe48b9776e7c2a35000bf571ee5a14e38ba46113f8b950e6208337aa16/IMG_1973.JPG" data-mid="101890518" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/939eabfe48b9776e7c2a35000bf571ee5a14e38ba46113f8b950e6208337aa16/IMG_1973.JPG" /&#62;



	
&#60;img width="2848" height="4272" width_o="2848" height_o="4272" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/ded33574a5a1eac73df12265a1020dbb1180943b71282ed1f87f7fc15156195a/IMG_1967.JPG" data-mid="101890513" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/ded33574a5a1eac73df12265a1020dbb1180943b71282ed1f87f7fc15156195a/IMG_1967.JPG" /&#62;
&#60;img width="4272" height="2848" width_o="4272" height_o="2848" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/7a48223178c5fabf369caae4bc2421d2662c8b535b1f06e9d6f71fe7b4633851/IMG_1985.JPG" data-mid="101890523" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/7a48223178c5fabf369caae4bc2421d2662c8b535b1f06e9d6f71fe7b4633851/IMG_1985.JPG" /&#62;


	
&#60;img width="2848" height="4272" width_o="2848" height_o="4272" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/4c42131752310a88d2009f4c1aed87a1e6288fa5f1298ef9973eb13f7e7c0e57/wedding56.jpg" data-mid="101892636" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/4c42131752310a88d2009f4c1aed87a1e6288fa5f1298ef9973eb13f7e7c0e57/wedding56.jpg" /&#62;
&#60;img width="2848" height="4272" width_o="2848" height_o="4272" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/4a97cb0062cfd9f001c6b9ef4b6469db9243015f9aaaa709217548cd6bf57320/wedding18.jpg" data-mid="101889569" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/4a97cb0062cfd9f001c6b9ef4b6469db9243015f9aaaa709217548cd6bf57320/wedding18.jpg" /&#62;
&#60;img width="2848" height="4272" width_o="2848" height_o="4272" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/bb509546a0d4cda1d341d3529c2fc0e959a303d72e2bf8a409ecf4a78f119a74/wedding50.jpg" data-mid="101889570" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/bb509546a0d4cda1d341d3529c2fc0e959a303d72e2bf8a409ecf4a78f119a74/wedding50.jpg" /&#62;




&#60;img width="2848" height="4272" width_o="2848" height_o="4272" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/f66612b2168ca49ee7a07ef25094e400948a5327b686a83dc31650b3b37a5bd8/IMG_2014.JPG" data-mid="101892558" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/f66612b2168ca49ee7a07ef25094e400948a5327b686a83dc31650b3b37a5bd8/IMG_2014.JPG" /&#62;
&#60;img width="2848" height="4272" width_o="2848" height_o="4272" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/e9352a55a385c551742fa4d99dba856bd853a1eef6c0273bcfc189b94d0d737e/IMG_2085EDIT.jpg" data-mid="101889501" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/e9352a55a385c551742fa4d99dba856bd853a1eef6c0273bcfc189b94d0d737e/IMG_2085EDIT.jpg" /&#62;
&#60;img width="2848" height="4272" width_o="2848" height_o="4272" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/f2f65f67d31b0ae906c914dc4bd2f023fe3bc7c5f328607dd94f9f7348b6a49f/IMG_2013.JPG" data-mid="101892557" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/f2f65f67d31b0ae906c914dc4bd2f023fe3bc7c5f328607dd94f9f7348b6a49f/IMG_2013.JPG" /&#62;

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		<title>Works in English</title>
				
		<link>https://mgbudemobi.com/Works-in-English</link>

		<pubDate>Wed, 30 Dec 2020 17:37:44 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>Works of Ogechi Mgbudem(obi)</dc:creator>

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		<description>
	Black Male Queerness2019





















Queerness,
as defined by Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, is “the open mesh of possibilities, gaps
…of meaning when the constituent elements of anyone’s gender, of anyone’s
sexuality aren’t made… to signify monolithically.” Queerness is meant to sit
outside clearly defined norms of gender and sexuality. But what art historians
call “queer art” is more often than not centered around the experiences of
white queer people. The queer bodies that are studied generally belong to white
artists. Queerness is studied as pertaining to heterosexuality or the gender
binary but rarely as it pertains to race. What does queerness mean for a black
man when his racial identity is so closely tied to aggressive heterosexual masculinity?
It isn’t the job of every black male artist to directly address this in their
work––just as white artists aren’t expected to address their whiteness in their
work––but I believe every artist displays their opinion on such politics with
everything they choose to leave in or take out of a work and the subject of the
works themselves.



&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp; There is a kind of tenderness in the
work and subject matter of queer photographers. This is especially prominent in
the work of queer male photographers. Sentimentality and the ability to
adequately express emotion is seen as inherently feminine and that which is
seen as feminine, by definition, must be alienated from masculine identity.
This means that any expression of emotion in conjunction with masculine desire
must be erased. Jennifer Doyle states in her book Hold it Against Me,
“the erasure or repression of emotion was a part of the larger repudiation of
all aspects of desire and embodiment in modernism.” Photographer Paul Mpagi
Sepuya introduces another way of viewing desire and intimacy by using people he
knows personally as subjects in his work. Robert Mapplethorpe, another queer photographer,
exhibits intimacy and desire in his work as well. But when the dichotomy of the
white and black races is considered, there is a shift in the type of desire
that can be seen.



Generally, Mapplethorpe’s work isn’t what one would
usually picture when discussing “tenderness” in queer photography. His works
are intimate, though rarely tender. His photography featured a side of New
York’s LGBT that was never seen in public at the time. His work would often
take place in the subject’s home, scouring the person’s most intimate setting
for a spectacle to photograph. And that is what his work creates; a sense of spectacle.
 Mapplethorpe’s desire to shock
predominately straight museum and gallery goers isn’t something that is brought
up when discussing his work and legacy. One could argue he was simply
photographing New York’s gay BDSM scene and therefore the subject matter would
naturally shock audiences that were not already familiar with the lifestyle.
But this stance shifts dramatically upon viewing a work such as Self-Portrait With Whip (1978) where
Mapplethorpe poses with a whip in his rectum. This work is so overtly intended
to elicit a negative sense of surprise that it is undeniable. With this
knowledge of Mapplethorpe’s affinity for spectacle, The Black Book becomes a spectacle of the black gay body. The
spectacle he creates for this body of work is different than previous works in
the sense that these bodies are not being shown partaking in BDSM. That which
elicited shock in the previous works was the exposure of explicitly sexual,
violent behavior. In The Black
Book, the sense of spectacle is derived from the mere existence of the
black male body.



In Black British Cinema: Spectatorship and Identity
Formation Manthia Diawara states, “Every narration places the spectator in
a position of agency; and race, class, and sexual relations influence the way
in which subjecthood is filled by the spectator.” The power dynamic between the
spectator, the photographer, and the black body was not lost on many a viewer. There
have been works created to be in conversation with The Black Book, such as Glenn Ligon’s Notes in the Margins of the Black Book (1991-93), but conversations
between artworks and perspectives often happen without an explicit intention to
engage. As stated earlier, an artist can display their personal beliefs without
intending to do so. The work of Paul Mpagi Sepuya engages in an implicit
conversation with The Black Book.
What strikes the viewer when seeing a work like Darkroom Mirror (2017) for the first time is the camera, poised in
the center of the frame. As the viewer is looking, Sepuya is looking back. This
act of looking invokes The Black Bookbecause it is the exact opposite of what is seen in that collection. Not only
is the black subject doing the looking, but his head is center frame, just
behind the camera lens––an enlarged eye. The black male subject is not only the
subject of the photograph, but the photographer as well. There is no difference
in gaze or intent between the photographer and the subject because they are the
same person. There is no presence of spectacle because the viewer is not meant
to look in awe of the exoticness of the subject. Instead, the viewer is invited
to partake in an intimate moment between Sepuya and the other man in frame. The
intimacy is not derived from the showing of parts of the body that are usually
hidden, in Sepuya’s words, “intimacy comes from the fact that the work is
grounded in real lives, friendships, and relationships.”



bell hooks says in her essay Post Modern Blackness, “racism is perpetuated when blackness is
associated solely with concrete gut level experience… the idea that there is no
meaningful connection between black experience and critical thinking about
aesthetics or culture must be continually interrogated.” This statement extends
to the way black bodies are depicted in art. Racism is also perpetuated when
blackness is excluded from the tenderness and sentimentality that comes with
intimacy. The idea that blackness can only be associated with sexual prowess
must be continually interrogated, not just in terms of heterosexuality, but in terms
of queerness as well. The relationship between white women and the
exotification of black men, as well as the relationship between white men and
black women, has a history dating back to American chattel slavery. But the
relationship between white men and the exotification of black men has only
recently begun to be unearthed. Paul Mpagi Sepuya investigates this link
between the black body, spectacle, and objectification by featuring his own
body and the bodies of those that he knows personally. Though Sepuya never
directly addresses race in his work, he dismantles the idea that black male
queerness is outside the realm of emotional tenderness by simply allowing
himself to be. To be with other men, to be by himself, to be with women, to be.






















Diawara,
M. (1990). Black British Cinema: Spectatorship and Identity Formation in
Territories. Public Culture,
3(1), 33-48.
Doyle,
J. (2013). Hold it Against Me. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University
Press.
Hooks,
Bell. “Post Modern Blackness.” Post Modern Culture, vol. 1, no. 1,
Sept. 1990.
Kosofsky
Sedgwick, Eve. “What's Queer?” Tendencies, 1993.
Lambert, Audra. “Paul Mpagi Sepuya Interview.” Crush Fanzine,
6 Sept. 2017.












	A New Look at Comedy
2019




















“Nothing in this world is
easy. Except pissing in the shower,” an exhausted Ruth says in Nadia’s general
direction before kissing her on the cheek, wishing her a happy birthday. Nadia
immediately divulges her feelings, almost impulsively, without acknowledging
Ruth’s greeting. She proceeds to wax poetic about a feeling of emptiness that
replaced her desire to go home with a random partygoer. Nadia remains quiet for
a beat, as if on the precipice of some great realization. Her silence breaks.
“Do you know when menopause starts?”



There’s a sort of game
Russian Doll plays with this scene that continues through the rest of the
episode and rest of the series. A game that one can’t fully appreciate until
they revisit the series after completing it.



Russian Doll’s first
episode is split into two parts: Pre-Death Nadia and Post-Death Nadia.
Pre-Death Nadia is someone we all want to be; decisive, laid back, confident.
She leans heavily into her unusual way of relating to the world which usually
garners tired reactions from her friends. She embraces it nonetheless. “It’s my
bad attitude that keeps me young.” Nadia leaves her birthday party early to
sleep with a random partygoer. During a condom pit-stop, she gives some
bothersome men directions to an abandoned warehouse instead of a club, her
personal form of divine retribution. After she’s done the deed with “random
partygoer,” which we later find out is named Mike, she sends him home in an
Uber before the conversation is able to get too deep. Pre-Death Nadia
appreciates her solitude but doesn’t mind one night’s casual company.



Alone in her apartment,
Nadia gets to work on some project for her job. She reaches for a cigarette,
only to find that she’s out. Sighing, she leaves her apartment to buy more. On
the way to the corner store, she spots Oatmeal, her missing cat, on the opposite
side of the street. Relieved to see him, she calls his name and steps into the
street without checking for oncoming traffic, gets hit by a taxi and dies.



Only after her first
death do we get to meet the real Nadia. Knowing a person’s “real”
personality isn’t an exact science. Many believe that we can only truly know a
person when we’ve seen them at their lowest; when their sick, when a loved one
dies, when misfortune befalls them. Using this logic, we don’t know who Nadia
is. Pre-Death Nadia isn’t Nadia; she’s merely a construction of who she wants
others to believe she is. Being resurrected only to return to the night of your
death where no one else has any memory of what you just lived through is a
confusing situation. It’s overwhelming, I’m sure. So, Nadia is entitled to a
little leeway when it comes to her behavior. But her shock wears off pretty
quickly after respawning. She attempts to talk through her confusion with Ruth,
a psychologist and her childhood guardian, who suggests Nadia’s confusion stems
from her problems with her mother. Nadia immediately changes the direction of
the conversation, reminding Ruth that not every problem in her life revolves
around her childhood trauma.



Nadia doesn’t like
talking about her mother. Big deal. We all have a family member we don’t like.
That doesn’t mean that Nadia is suddenly a different person, right? Well, she definitely
has some hidden depths that we weren’t privy to in Pre-Death mode. Like how she
dated a married man, causing his life to fall apart? We definitely didn’t know
that. Nadia’s interaction with John reveals more than just a hesitance to talk
about the past; it shows that she refuses to accept her role in hurting other
people.



“Don’t use my kid to ease
your guilt,” John says after Nadia shuts down his offer to speak candidly about
how they ended. The conversation got awkward, as acknowledging your part in
ending a marriage can be, so she asked about his daughter Lucy to divert
attention away from herself. She does this again, following John’s counter with
“I lost my cat.” So, they look for the cat. They carry on a pleasant
conversation until Nadia spots Oatmeal and runs after him, almost getting hit
by a taxi again. John saves her from the same fate as before which, for some
reason, makes Nadia upset. They argue; John tells her that he was upset that he
had to be invited to her party by Maxine. Instead of Nadia to understand why
he’s hurt by this exclusion from her life, she ridicules him for being upset.
It’s obvious that John has a very easily exploitable soft spot for Nadia––she
tells him flat out that she doesn’t need a line to get in his pants. You can’t
help feeling bad for the guy. He ruined his marriage for someone who couldn’t
care less about his feelings. But Nadia leaves him in a huff, finding Oatmeal
by herself before promptly dying again. This time by falling off a bridge.



And thus, we arrive at
our game––our dance, really. Russian Dolldances with its audience, one step forward, two steps back. For every step
Nadia takes towards self-reflection, she moves backwards two. “Nothing in This
World is Easy” lays the foundation for the central theme of the show in a way
that is imperceptible if you only give the show a once-through. Yeah, it’s good
the first time around, but the second time around it’s great. The dance moves
like this; Ruth takes a step forward, “This birthday may reveal wounds from
your relationship with your mother.” Nadia steps back twice, “You’re not my
shrink. Not everything is about Mom.” John takes a step forward, “I miss you.”
Nadia takes two steps back, “Don’t guilt me into getting back together with
you.” These aren’t big steps per se, but this is the first episode. As the
series unfolds, the recurrence of her mother’s memory and her relationship with
John shows that even acknowledging these events in her life can prove to be too
much for her.



I remember my first time
watching this episode. Seeing Pre-Death Nadia and thinking “She knows what she
wants out of life. I want her confidence; I want her friends,” then seeing
Post-Death Nadia and thinking “Actually, she’s kind of a bitch.” But maybe
she’s not a bitch. Maybe she’s just a person that’s deeply flawed and moves
through the world as if she were infallible. It’s easy to see yourself in Nadia,
especially the person you want to be. Who wouldn’t want to a streetwise New
Yorker with sharp, dry wit? But that person doesn’t exist. What exists is a
façade hiding pain and shame. Makes you wonder what personalities you’ve
constructed for yourself in order to be shielded from the nonsense of this
world.



Russian
Doll is a series well worth the 4-hour binge. Hell, you
might even watch it twice.









Russian Doll 2019. Netflix.




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	Revue de Felicité2019




















Félicité est
un film réalisé et écrit par Alain Gomis. C’est une coproduction entre la
France, le Belge, l’Allemagne, le Sénégal, et le Liban qui est sorti en 2017.
Véro Tshanda Beya Mputu jouer dans le rôle principal comme Félicité. Le film a
débuté en sélection officielle à la Berlinale 2017 où il a gagné le grand
prix du jury.



Le film suit Félicité, une chanteuse dans un bar à
Kinshasa. Elle est une mère célibataire qui vit avec son fils de 16 ans, Samo.
Après recevoir la nouvelle que Samo était blessé dans un accident, elle cherche
désespérément l’argent pour son opération. Pendant et après cet évènement
infortuné, Félicité se rend compte qu’elle ne peut pas survivre seule, qu’elle
a besoin des autres dans la vie.



Félicité&#38;nbsp;est une expérience de son et
sentiment. Le film commence avec un bar et le musique. La caméra bouge autour
de la foule, en faisant les gros plans des clientes. La séquence commence avec
le visage de Félicité et elle finit avec le commencement de sa chanson. Les
gros plans deviennent un fil à travers le film. Une caméra portable suit un
personnage près de son visage tandis qu’il bouge dans l’espace. Les instances
quand la caméra est loin d’un personnage soit les plans généraux ou les plans
moyens. Les plans généraux montrent Kinshasa dans sa réalité. Les foules, les
voitures qui roulent sans direction, les motos, les rues en terre, la
poussière. Les plans moyens se situent dans les séquences des rêves. Dans ces
scènes, la camera suit Félicité à distance, en la regardant comme le public la
regarde. Les chants de la chorale jouent au-dessus de ces scènes. Les plans
avec Kasai Allstars et l’orchestre interrompent le diegesis et ils ajoutent une
transition entre les scènes narratives et les scènes de rêve.



Félicité offrit une vue de la vie africaine qui est réel, presque
palpable. Les films africains populaires se situent dans une réalité qui est
divorcé de notre monde. Ils se passent dans une réalité où la pauvreté
n’existent pas ou elle est bien cachée. Félicité&#38;nbsp;nous présent les déchets et la poussière de Kinshasa, les cheveux crépus de sa
naissance des cheveux à Félicité. Tout est présenté sans honte. C’est
rafraichissant, exister sans hésitation, sans se critiquer, sans honte. Quand
l’action est lente, le film regarde dans les vies des personnages, en explorant
la poésie de la vie africaine.












	
	
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