Daresalam (English language: "Let There Be Peace"F. Pfaff, Focus on African Films, 3) is a 2000 dramatic film by director Issa Serge Coelo. It has been considered one of the very few recent African films that has treated the theme of the internecine conflicts that have ravaged the African continent since independence.R. Armes, African Filmmaking: North and South of the Sahara, 150 While set in a fictional African country called Daresalam, it reflects the civil war that ravaged Chad during the 1960s and 1970s. " Issa Serge Coelo, cinéaste tchadien: "On a encore du travail à faire" ", Tchad et Culture.
Director Issa Coelo, in speaking of his film, explains he wanted to expose the vicious circle that originates when a despotic government causes the outbreak of a civil war, which ends to feed itself endlessly, as each power maintains itself through despotism, thus generating its own armed opposition. In Coelo's words, "war becomes the only economy of the country. Violence, the only way of speech and communication possible. ... With in mind the myth of Cain and Abel, Daresalam narrates how this war machine finishes to pit one against the other two friends, at the beginning moved by the same ideals. This story is meant to be a speech against war and for humanity's survival."
The film is analyzed by Roy Armes, that observes how Coelo avoids any heroics, showing the rebels' limitations and the confusion of the conflict. While judging the work "a sincere and serious study of a key aspect of contemporary Africa", he feels that the film lacks the passion of Med Hondo's works on the Polisario Front rebels, possibly because of Coelo's belief that "cinema should ask questions rather than give answers", which could explain the distance we are maintained from the two main characters. The film is also mentioned by Françoise Pfaff as an example of a new series of African historical films, which avoid the oversimplification of the past, and in particular Daresalam in its problematic description of post-independence Africa is seen as close to Flora Gomes' Mortu Nega.
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