Sally Faulkner
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‘Es que no sabéis mirar’
Colony and memory in Lejos de África
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This chapter balances a positive account of the originality of Lejos de África / Far from Africa, the first Spanish film since democracy to address the nation’s former imperial territories in what is today Equatorial Guinea, while also assessing its shortcomings. The chapter first considers the lack of engagement with audiences that may have arisen from its presentation and marketing. It then suggests that the film’s main aim, to explore the final decades of Spain’s possession of territories in the Gulf of Guinea before independence as Equatorial Guinea was won in 1968, from the perspective of a young girl, then teenager, then young woman, is brilliant. The exploration of interracial female friendship is also highly original. However, the unevenness of Lejos de África stems from some at best odd, at worst weak, aesthetic choices, especially the deployment of European and African music. Occasionally the film betrays Eurocentrism even as it seeks to question it.

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