A synthesis of personal and public history : 1990’s Achkar and Peck

Servanne Woodward
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Abstract

The 1991 films of David Achkar, a French-Guinean filmmaker, and Raoul Peck, a Haitian filmmaker whose family spent many years in the Congo, intersect around Patrice Lumumba (1925-1961), the first Congolese prime minister and victim of a political murder. Both films remain intensely personal if not intimate. Achkar is reminiscent of Beckett in the depiction of “waiting for” an occurrence ever differed. What is haunting about Achkar’s quest is that the filmmaker is in search of his father Marof David Achkar (1930-1971), a choreographer of the Keïta Fodeba “Ballets Africains” (1955-1960) and cultural counsellor to the Guinean embassy in Washington (1960-1964). Marof had replaced Telli Diallo at the United Nations (1964-1968) when he worked against apartheid in South Africa; in 1968 U. Thant (secretary to the United Nations) recommended him to a post of high commissioner to the World Organization in Namibia, a proposal rejected by Sékou Touré (elected as the first President of Guinea, serving from 1958 until his death in 1984) who recalled him to Conakry. Upon his return to Guinea, Marof Achkar was arrested and brought to camp Boiro, where he was tortured, made to sign charges of embezzlement and executed on January 25, 1971. At the time, David Achkar was a child — something of the child remains in the biography of his father. Beyond his father’s political ordeal is the first-hand demonstration of the personal impact the execution had on him; he connects more publicly and didactically with the administration of justice versus political murders in his last film, Kiti, justice en Guinée (1996). Both Achkar and Peck employ collages of family reels, documentaries, and film that may be inspired by Surrealism, a movement mentioned in Death of a Prophet (1991). Peck also moved toward a stronger Marxist message in his 2017 film about the German philosopher, and though he has done several documentaries, he is attached to the current relevance of legacies when he depicts Marx as appealing to today’s youth. In both 1991 films, the sliding distance of political heroes, from public careers to intimate family documents is further complicated by the filmmakers’ decision to intertwine plain autobiography to their biographies. They are working from the premises of affective encounters to create a sense of community. Eventually, Achkar and Peck raise issues about the philosophical nature of identity and the autobiography involved in the encounter with sacrificed or resurrected prophets as interpreted in Allah-Tantou—God’s Will be Done [À la grâce de Dieu] (1991) by David Achkar (1960-1998) and Death of a Prophet, by Raoul Peck (1954-present).
个人和公共历史的综合:1990年的阿卡和佩克
1991年,法国-几内亚裔电影制作人大卫·阿奇卡尔(David Achkar)和海地电影制作人拉乌尔·佩克(Raoul Peck)的电影交织在刚果第一任总理、政治谋杀受害者帕特里斯·卢蒙巴(1925-1961)的周围。两部电影即使算不上亲密,也都保持着强烈的个人色彩。阿奇卡让人想起贝克特对“等待”不同事件的描述。阿奇卡尔的寻访之旅萦绕不去的是他的父亲马洛夫·大卫·阿奇卡尔(1930-1971),他是Keïta Fodeba“非洲芭蕾舞团”的编舞家(1955-1960),也是几内亚驻华盛顿大使馆的文化参赞(1960-1964)。马洛夫在联合国(1964年至1968年)接替泰利·迪亚洛(Telli Diallo),当时迪亚洛在南非反对种族隔离;1968年,吴丹(联合国秘书长)推荐他担任世界组织驻纳米比亚高级专员一职,但被ssamukou tour(当选为几内亚首任总统,从1958年任职至1984年去世)拒绝,并将他召回科纳克里。回到几内亚后,马罗夫·阿奇卡尔被捕并被带到博罗集中营,在那里他受到酷刑,被迫签署挪用公款的指控,并于1971年1月25日被处决。当时,大卫·阿奇卡尔还是个孩子——他父亲的传记中保留了一些孩子的特征。除了他父亲的政治苦难之外,他还亲身见证了处决对他个人的影响;在他的最后一部电影《基蒂,正义的几内亚》(1996)中,他将司法与政治谋杀更加公开和说教地联系在一起。Achkar和Peck都使用了家庭影片、纪录片和电影的拼贴,这些作品的灵感可能来自超现实主义,这是《先知之死》(1991)中提到的一种运动。派克在2017年拍摄的关于这位德国哲学家的电影中,也倾向于传递更强烈的马克思主义信息。尽管他已经拍过几部纪录片,但当他把马克思描绘成对当今年轻人有吸引力的人物时,他还是依附于当代遗产的相关性。在这两部1991年的电影中,政治英雄从公开的职业生涯到亲密的家庭文件之间的距离越来越远,由于导演决定将普通的自传与他们的传记交织在一起,这种距离变得更加复杂。他们从情感接触的前提下工作,以创造一种社区感。最后,Achkar和Peck提出了关于身份的哲学本质以及与牺牲或复活的先知相遇所涉及的自传的问题,如David Achkar(1960-1998)和Raoul Peck (1954-present)的《安拉- tantou -上帝的意志》(À la grence de Dieu)(1991)和《先知之死》(Death of a Prophet)所解释的那样。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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