by Margaretta wa Gacheru
While Lupita Nyong’o’s break-out film 12 Years a Slave just
won Best Motion Picture award this past weekend at the 67th British
Academy Film Awards or the BAFTA’s in UK, our favourite Kenyan film star
didn’t get the Best Supporting Actress award as we had hoped.
Instead, it went to Jennifer Lawrence for her zany role in American Hustle.
Yet Lupita still has one more chance in two weeks time to win big-time when the 86th Academy Awards in Hollywood are announced.
Our
girl is a strong contender again for Best Supporting Actress; although
this time she’ll be up against even more formidable odds as there’s not
only Ms Lawrence.
There’s also Julia Roberts for her part in August Osage County and Sally Hawkins who played Cate Blanchette’s sister in Blue Jasmine.
Lupita
has already won multiple film awards, been featured in countless
interviews and walked on a multitude of red carpets looking
super-photogenic and ultra-chic.
In the meantime, while
all eyes were either on London, Hollywood or New York where Lupita’s
now the darling of the paparazzi, right here in Nairobi the just-ended
11th French Film Festival introduced two youthful local talents to the
limelight this past Monday night when their film, Sur le Chemin de
l’ecole premiered at Alliance Francaise.
The English
translation of the Pascal Plisson documentary may not have a flashing
ring to it since ‘‘On the way to school’’ sounds rather pedestrian.
MANY OBSTACLES
But
the film’s Kenya premier, which served to cap off the seven-film
showcase of practically brand new French films, was anything but dull.
Featuring
four sets of pre-teens coming from very different backgrounds and
corners of the globe, the one common denominator among them was each
having to face and overcome a myriad of obstacles in order to fulfil
their dreams and go to school.
The other six films
screened during the festival included various genres: there was drama
(Pour une Femme), comedy (Camille Redouble), bittersweet tragedy
(Cloclo), animated action adventure (Kirikou et les homes et les femmes)
and several films that mixed several genres into one (Pop Redemption
and Duvent dans mes Mollets). Sur le Chemin de l’ecole is billed as a
documentary since it captures real life experiences of children whose
families reside either in rural Argentina, India, Morocco or Kenya.
But
because Plisson was highly selective in his choice of children and
geographical terrain, his film seemed more like a panoramic docu-drama
filled with everything from drama and adventure to touching emotional
moments when the children faced enormous, even life-threatening,
obstacles on their way to school.
One of the highlights
of the premier was the appearance in person of the two Kenyan stars,
Jackson Saikong and his little sister Salome.
Selected
in 2011 when Plisson visited six primary schools in Laikipia County and
met nearly 1,500 children, Jackson had an instant appeal for the
Frenchman who found the 11-year-ld at the last school on his list,
Soit-Oudo Primary.
Speaking to the Business Daily
shortly before the film’s Kenya premier, Jackson (whose full Maasai name
is Jackson Molloyian ole Saikong) said Plisson asked him very direct
questions:
How far do you walk to get to school every
day? “15 kilometres each way,” was his reply, which turned out to be the
farthest distance that any other child walked on a daily basis in the
district.
What, if any, dangers do you face along the
way? “Hyenas, snakes and buffalos as well as elephants, cheetahs and
lions,” Jackson said. The fact that the boy took his little sister
(three years his junior) over the same treacherous terrain made the boy
of even greater appeal to Plisson who went on to spend three weeks with
the Saikongs, accompanied by only one cameraman and one soundman.
The
beauty of Plisson’s cinematography is that the children come across as
utterly natural and unaffected by the camera, even when they have to run
away from elephants and Salome spills her precious plastic pitcher of
water as she flees for her life.
The spillage is all
the more salient since the film opens with Jackson digging for the water
that both he and Salome will bring to school.
This is part of his daily pre-school routine, along with collecting sticks that they carry for making the lunchtime fire.
Life
has changed a great deal for Jackson and Salome since they first met
Plisson. Both children are now sponsored to attend the best primary
school in the district.
Both have travelled
(accompanied by their guardian, head teacher Ms Anne Resiano) all the
way from Laikipia to Paris for the film’s official launch, and to Qatar
where they starred at an International Youth Conference.
So
Jackson (now 13) and Salome (now 10) may not yet have the celebrity
status of a Lupita, but the success of Plisson’s film and the
opportunities it has opened up for them suggest the sky’s the limit for
these two blossoming Kenyan film stars.
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