Saul Williams Stars In 'Tey' + Interview With Director Alain Gomis
Film: Saul Williams stars in Alain Gomis' 'Tey.' We spoke with the Senegalese/French director.
"Satché must die by the end of the day." Such is the surrealist Senegal of Alain Gomis' Tey, a toast to life through an exploration of its morbid counterpart. The latest from the French/Senegalese director is a diasporic tale of the final day in the life of Senegalese returnee Satché (played by Saul Williams), who has been away from his community after years of living in the U.S. Tey makes its American theatrical debut on October 6th at New York's MIST Harlem Cinema, and will thereafter run in selected theaters (Oct 6-Nov 6) through a "hybridized, community-driven model." Said BelleMoon Productions founder Guetty Felin on the importance of reaching out to smaller markets:
"The hybridized model for releasing Tey is really about 'cutting our cloth' as my mentor often says. We know our film very well, we know who is sensitive to this sort of cinema and who isn't. It is definitely not mainstream. Neither Alain or Saul or my company BelleMoon productions for that matter, is mainstream. This is an independent foreign film with subtitles, and black... We're not going to break box office with it and that's not truly our main goal. We've figured out who our audience or community was for the film and we are basically bringing the film to them, whether it is through a small theatrical release, college/university screenings or community screenings."
Catch our interview with director Alain Gomis and watch the Toots and the Maytals-featuring trailer below. These are two minutes that will leave you in a whirlwind of overwhelming joy.
OKA: While living in Dakar during filming did you relate to Satché's experience in terms of diaspora-related disconnect with Senegal?
Alain Gomis: I've lived beetween Dakar and Paris for 20 years now. I was saying with this film, like Satché, this is my place, this is my present. In fact I don't have any patriotic feeling for no country. My land is in Guinea Bissau, my fights, my dreams are in Senegal, my cinema, my family, my loves, are everywhere. Even in my little family village in Guinea Bissau, I don't know no pure people. As soon as you understand that everybody is fighting in his own body, you deal with human beings with fundamentals same type of doubts. I am a filmaker, I'm dealing with souls, I'm disconected everywhere, and connected everywhere, just like Satché.
OKA: What about your experience with film, if anything, made you realize the necessity of a hybridized, community-driven model of distribution? Is there anything about this film in particular that would make such a model a goal?
AG: Maybe each time that you're trying to make something different, I mean with a free and no marketed form, you also have to imagine new ways to reach people. Especially with an African film, Africa is like another planet for a lot of people. With this film we have organised special nights, "ciné-concert," in theatres, in unergrounds places, in concert halls... Trying to reach all kinds of audiences... From Addis Abeba to Sydney, we had wonderful experiences. And above all, it is fun to do, travel with a film just like a band in tour. And people are surprised, because this film is about us, whereever you come from. In the Q&A people talk about themselves.
OKA: Has your attitude toward death changed as a result of your work on Tey?
AG: Yes. One of the reason I've made this film was to face my own fear of death. It has become a reality. And if your death become a reality, your life become a reality. It's a film about life.
OKA What music would you listen to if you knew today was going to be your last day to live?
AG: I know now, that is something you can't predict. I have to make my life connected with my present. My last day have started 40 years ago. Every second is my last one. Today I have listened Baloji.
For more on 'Tey' read the full press release and stay up to date here.