
Mali filmmaker Souleymane Cisse, ‘father of African cinema', dies at age 84
Mali's highly acclaimed director Souleymane Cisse, who is considered one of the pillars of African cinema, has died at age 84.
His daughter announced that Cisse died on Wednesday, leaving a trailblazing legacy on the silver screen spanning half a century that was marked by a commitment to African storytelling, deep humanism and profound political engagement.
'Papa died today in Bamako. We are all in shock. He dedicated all his life to his country, to cinema and to art,' Mariam Cisse said.
Cisse won the jury's prize at the 1987 Cannes Film Festival for 'Yeelen' ('Brightness'), which draws on legends from west Africa's Bambara people.
In 2023, Cannes honoured him again with the Carrosse d'Or, an award given to directors who have 'marked the history of cinema with their boldness, their exacting standards and their intransigence in staging'.
That award was stolen from his home in 2024, before being found again.
Fellow Malian director Boubacar Sidibe said in a message on Facebook that the Sahel country's film industry was in 'mourning', while Minister of Culture Mamou Daffe lamented the loss 'of this monument of African cinema'.
The Film at Lincoln Center non-profit also praised Cisse as 'one of cinema's greats', citing his work, Yeelen, for 'catapulting African film to the world stage'.
'If God wills it'
Cisse is one of two only filmmakers to have twice won the grand prize at Burkina Faso's Panafrican Film and Television Festival (FESPACO), among the largest and most prestigious in Africa.
He was due to board a plane on Thursday to Burkina Faso capital's Ouagadougou to head the 29th edition of the festival's features jury from February 22.
In his 2023 Cannes interview with the AFP news agency, he criticised the 'censorship' and 'contempt' that he said prevented African films being distributed around the world.
Even on the day of his death, he urged the military leaders in Mali – which declared 2025 a year of culture – to help the country's industry catch up with its continental rivals.
'It is not enough to make cinema; the works must also be visible. May the authorities help us with the construction of cinemas,' he told a news conference on Wednesday morning. 'This is the appeal I make to them before my death, if God wills it.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Al Jazeera
25-05-2025
- Al Jazeera
Iranian dissident Jafar Panahi wins top prize at Cannes Film Festival
NewsFeed Iranian dissident Jafar Panahi wins top prize at Cannes Film Festival Iranian director Jafar Panahi's film, It Was Just an Accident, has been awarded the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival. The dissident has endured years of travel bans and prison terms in Iran for his filmmaking, which served as inspiration for his award-winning work.


Qatar Tribune
25-05-2025
- Qatar Tribune
Iranian film 'It was Just an Accident' wins Palme D'Or at Cannes festival
CANNES, FRANCE: An Iranian thriller film that explores corruption and state violence in the country has won the the Palme d'Or, the coveted top prize at the Cannes Film Festival. It Was Just an Accident , directed by dissident Iranian filmmaker Jafar Panahi, was crowned at the world-famous festival on Saturday, hours after a power outage briefly threw the event off course. The festival's crowd burst into a roaring standing ovation for Panahi, who has endured years of travel bans and prison terms in Iran due to his provocative cinema, often produced in secret. He had been banned from leaving Iran for more than 15 years. 'Art mobilises the creative energy of the most precious, most alive part of us. A force that transforms darkness into forgiveness, hope and new life,' said jury president Juliette Binoche when announcing the award. On stage, Panahi said what mattered most was the future of his country. 'Let us join forces,' Panahi said. 'No one should tell us what kind of clothes we should wear, or what we should or shouldn't do.' Partly inspired by Panahi's own experience in jail, It Was Just An Accident follows a man named Vahid (played by Vahid Mobasseri), who kidnaps a man with a false leg who looks just like the one who tortured him in prison and ruined his life. Vahid sets out to verify with other prison survivors that it is indeed their torturer, and then decide what to do with him. Critics have praised the film as a clever, symbolic exploration of justice that blends dark humour with its intense themes. The festival's Grand Prix, or second prize, was awarded to Joachim Trier's Norwegian family drama, Sentimental Value , his lauded follow-up to The Worst Person in the World . Kleber Mendonca Filho's Brazilian political thriller, The Secret Agent , won two big awards: best director for Fihlo and best actor for Wagner Moura. The jury prize was split between two films: Oliver Laxe's desert road trip, Sirat and Mascha Schilinski's German, generation-spanning drama, Sound of Falling . Best actress went to Nadia Melliti for The Little Sister , Hafsia Herzi's French coming-of-age drama. Cannes also honoured Hasan Hadi's The President's Cake with a best first film award, marking the first time an Iraqi film has won an award at the festival. The Cannes closing ceremony took place after a major power outage struck southeastern France on Saturday, knocking out traffic lights and forcing businesses to close along the main shopping street in the Alpes-Maritimes holiday region. Police suspect arson as the cause. Geopolitical tensions were also a constant backdrop at the festival, with Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the genocide in Gaza and US President Donald Trump's proposal of tariffs on foreign-made films fuelling discussion. More than 900 actors and filmmakers signed an open letter denouncing the genocide in Gaza, according to the organisers.


Qatar Tribune
25-05-2025
- Qatar Tribune
Power restored in Cannes after suspected arson disrupts film festival
Paris: Electricity has been restored in the southern French city of Cannes after a major power cut disrupted the closing weekend of the international film festival, with police suspecting an act of arson. Some 160,000 homes in the coastal resort and neighbouring municipalities had their power restored on Saturday, electricity network operator RTE wrote on X. The film festival's awards ceremony will go ahead as planned on Saturday evening, the organizers have confirmed. The main venue - the Festival Palace - has its own independent power supply, so the festival programme continued as normal for the most part despite the power cut. However, film screenings at the Cineum, a multiplex cinema located outside the city centre, were interrupted. The Cannes Film Festival is considered one of the world's most prestigious, along with Venice. This year, 22 films are competing for the top prize, the Palme d'Or. Police are still investigating the power cut, with a night-time fire at an electricity station believed to be the reason for the outage. A police spokeswoman said authorities believe the fire, in the municipality of Tanneron, may have been started deliberately. However, she was unable to say whether there was a connection between the incident and the film festival. According to French media reports, a pylon also fell onto a high-voltage power line in the morning. Le Parisien newspaper reported that the pylon had been tilting strangely at the time. It is not yet clear whether the incident had a criminal background. (DPA)