Metacritic Film

Bamako

Starring Aïssa Maïga, Maimouna Hélène Diarra, Balla Habib Dembélé, Djénéba Koné, Hamadoun Kassogué, William Bourdon, Mamadou Kanouté, and Danny Glover

MPAA RATING: Not Rated

New Yorker Films
Drama
115 minutes | Color
Mali / USA / France
Released In Theaters February 14, 2007

Set in the courtyard of house in Bamako, the capital city of Mali, this film features a mock trial between representatives of African society and international financial institutions. Alongside these very public political proceedings, the film offers an intimate glimpse of everyday life in contemporary Africa.

WRITTEN BY
Abderrahmane Sissako

DIRECTED BY
Abderrahmane Sissako

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

81 / 100

Critic Reviews

100 Entertainment Weekly
The serious accusations are leavened by the moments of brimming, illogical, intimate neighborly dailiness the filmmaker also captures with warmth and infectious high spirits.
100 Boston Globe
As demonstrated in his previous film, a plangent snapshot of subsistence called "Waiting for Happiness," Sissako is a poet, and the filmmaking in this new picture is stuff of a deserving laureate.
100 Chicago Reader
One reason Bamako feels like a blast of sanity is that the theoretical debates about the state of the world, particularly Africa and more particularly Mali, are only half of its agenda. The other half, broadly speaking, is the life of everyday Africans.
90 The New York Times
Bamako is something different: a work of cool intelligence and profound anger, a long, dense, argument that is also a haunting visual poem.
88 Chicago Tribune
Sissako has an unusual camera eye, patient and alert to the ebb and flow of both the courtroom sequences and the outside scenes. The music is wonderful as well.
88 Philadelphia Inquirer
Never mind Hollywood's big-star, big-budget hand-wringing about Africa - Bamako is the real thing.
80 Los Angeles Times
Bamako is an attack on globalization that is endlessly cogent, confrontational -- and, best of all, as captivating as it is illuminating.
80 The New Republic
Sissako makes his point: Africa's best treasure is its humanity.
80 Salon.com
A barrel of laughs, this ain't. But it's a fearless high-wire act, grim and witty, confrontational and self-mocking. Its message may be dire, but Bamako is a feat of intellectual and cinematic daring that will leave your brain buzzing.
80 Variety
Rather miraculously, picture succeeds in painlessly educating its viewers about global politics and economics while it describes contemporary Africa with freshness and clarity.
80 Empire
Far from an easy watch, either in terms of its hard-hitting content, seemingly haphazard structuring or its dense symbolism. But this makes sense of the political intricacies by balancing the rhetoric and statistics with everyday occurrences that give the iniquities and inadequacies a human face.
78 Austin Chronicle
Bamako, with Sissako's poetic blend of the humdrum and the theoretical, is altogether fascinating. Dramatic features born and bred on the African continent are rare commodities on these shores, and the opportunities they offer can stretch far beyond film appreciation and into the realm of world understanding.
75 New York Post
Credit Sissako for entertainingly blending serious international issues with the daily comings and goings of village life. A bit more Glover wouldn't have hurt - but you can't have everything.
75 New York Daily News
Heated speeches about the International Monetary Fund, debt relief and global responsibility may not sound like your idea of Friday-night entertainment, but Sissako makes a strong case.
75 San Francisco Chronicle
A powerful polemic leavened with moments of beauty and humor.
70 Washington Post
No one can deny the powerful reality that weaves its way through Bamako.
70 Village Voice Nathan Lee
Bamako brings relief from the latest round of Africa chic in the media, reversing "the flood of information that flows one way." It colors the Africa Problem from the inside out.
58 The Onion (A.V. Club)
The film feels oddly slack and inert, livened only by testimony better suited to another forum.

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