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DramaRomance

Touki Bouki

- The Journey of the Hyena.

Mory, a cowherd, and Anta, a university student, try to make money in order to go to Paris and leave their boring past behind.

Release Date : 1973-05-10

Language :ArabicFrenchWolof

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Studio KankouramaCinegrit

Production Country : Senegal

Alternative Titles : Journey of the Hyena

Cast

Magaye Niang

Character Name : Mory

Original Name : Magaye Niang

Gender : Male

Myriam Niang

Character Name : Anta

Original Name : Myriam Niang

Gender : Female

Christoph Colomb

Character Name :

Original Name : Christoph Colomb

Gender : Male

Mustapha Ture

Character Name :

Original Name : Mustapha Ture

Gender : Male

Aminata Fall

Character Name : Aunt Oumy

Original Name : Aminata Fall

Gender : Female

Ousseynou Diop

Character Name : Charlie

Original Name : Ousseynou Diop

Gender : Male

Ndou Labia

Character Name :

Original Name : Ndou Labia

Gender : Male

Reviews

B

badelf

@badelf

2024-05-30

I don't what to say about this movie. One thing is very certain. The Avant-Garde movement of the 1960s and 1970s is blatantly clear in the styling of this film. That alone makes this one work a significant, historical mile-post in cultural cinema. Typically avant-garde, the film's sarcasm pointed at the bourgeois (capitalist) class is not only quite biting, but also quite humorous. It uses the juxtaposition of horrendously misfitting music as a means to an end. And it works beautifully. Other than it's class struggle element, I'm not sure what else is relevant in the 21st century. But as historical cinema, it's clearly valuable.

G

griggs79

@griggs79

2025-03-24

_Touki Bouki_ is a strange, stylish trip through ’70s Dakar, following two young lovers desperate to get to Paris. It’s got that scrappy, rebellious energy—lots of quick cuts, pop music, and surreal moments that give it a real French New Wave feel. But it’s not just fun and games. The slaughterhouse imagery is appropriately grim and sticks with you, casting a dark shadow over the whole thing. Mambéty’s saying something big about escape, identity, and what’s lost chasing a dream.