The
University of St. Thomas this fall will host the Tournées
Festival, an event in which five French films will be
presented on campus.
A
different film will be shown each week beginning Oct. 15 and
ending Nov. 13. All showings will be held in the
O’Shaughnessy Educational Center auditorium and will begin
at 7 p.m.
The films are free and open to the public.
Since its
inception, the Tournées Festival has partnered with hundreds
of universities and has made it possible for more than
250,000 students to discover French-language films.
St. Thomas was awarded a grant from the Tournées Festival to
choose and feature five French films from a list of current
selections. The French section of the Modern and Classical
Languages Department applied for the grant and is hosting
the festival at St. Thomas.
The film
schedule is listed below. Discussions will follow three of
the films: “La Moustache,” “Indigènes” and “ Bamako.”
Refreshments will be served after the showing of the last
film on Nov. 13.
Tuesday, Nov. 6
“Bamako”
A trial pitting African civil society against such
international institutions as the World Bank and the
International Monetary Fund has set a stage in the courtyard
of a home in Bamako, Mali. Chaka, an unemployed married
father, is preoccupied with the imminent break up of his
marriage to Melé, a popular lounge singer. Filmed with warm
colors and inspirational music, “Bamako” voices Africa’s
grievances in an original and profoundly moving way.
Tuesday, Nov. 13
“Chats Perchés” (The Grinning Cat)
French cinema essayist Chris Marker’s documentary chronicles
his search for the graffiti artist(s) behind the sudden
appearance of grinning yellow cat paintings on Paris’
buildings and public surfaces in late 2001. A critical film
that examines Paris’ changing social climate post-9-11.