Sira is a 2023 drama film written and directed by Apolline Traoré and starring Nafissatou Cissé, Mike Danon, Lazare Minoungou, Nathalie Vairac and Ruth Werner. The film depicts the story of young nomad named Sira, who after a brutal attack refuses to surrender to her fate without a fight and instead takes a stand against Islamist terror.[1] It is a co-production between Burkina Faso, Senegal, France and Germany.
It had its world premiere on 21 February 2023 at the 73rd Berlin International Film Festival,[2] where it won the Panorama Audience Award for Best Feature Film.[3] It was selected as the Burkinabé entry in the Best International Feature Film category for the 96th Academy Awards. Burkina Faso submitted a film for the first time since 1989.[4] On December 7, it appeared in the eligible list for consideration for the 2024 Oscars,[5] but it didn't make it to the shortlist.[6]
Synopsis
The film set in the Sahel tells the story of a young Fulani girl, Sira, travelling to meet her groom, Jean-Sidi. Suddenly she and her family are attacked by Islamist terrorists. All the men are shot and the leader of the gang, Yéré, takes Sira and rapes her. Left for dead in the desert, Sira finds herself alone and takes refuge in a cave as she weaves her survival plan.
Cast
Nafissatou Cissé as Sira
Mike Danon as Moustapha
Lazare Minoungou as Yere
Nathalie Vairac as Aissatou
Ruth Werner as Kemi
Abdramane Barry as Jean Sidi
Ildevert Meda as Karim
Oumou Ba as Djamila
Seydou Diallo as Tidiane
Moïse Tiemtore as Faysal
Production
The film received grant from World Cinema Fund (WCF Africa Program) of €39,000 in November 2021.[7]
The lead actor, Nafissatou Cissé was selected out of more than 1,000 girls, who were auditioned. It was filmed in Mauritania, Northwest Africa.[8]
Vladan Petkovic reviewing for Cineuropa praised Nafissatou Cissé writing, "It is Cissé who grabs the audience with her all-out performance, making the film more poignant than a simple rape-revenge set-up." Petkovic appreciated the director Apolline Traoré and Cinematographer Nicolas Berteyac's "complex choreography of numerous characters, animals and vehicles that populate the wide shots". He praised editor Sylvie Gadmer, who he opined, "deftly combines them [shots] with intense close-ups," and composer Cyril Morin, for "mostly well-distributed score". For the film Petkovic opined,"Traoré has devised the story in a way that is both clever and honest", which is set in an exotic location "with a fierce African woman as a protagonist who fights back against all odds". He added, all that makes it a "rare African audience-friendly film to break out internationally."[16]