Black women confront exploitation in Ousmane Sembène’s 1966 debut feature, about a Senegalese woman working for an exploitative French couple, and a labor documentary about American hospital workers.
Chez Jolie Coiffure
- Part of
- The Black Worker and
- BAM Film 2025
At the start of Chez Jolie Coiffure, director Rosine Mbakam (The Two Faces of a Bamileke Woman) stands outside the salon of the title: a tiny shop in the immigrant Brussels district of Matonge, established in Belgium by Sabine, a charismatic, larger than-life personality from Cameroon. Invited inside, Mbakam becomes a regular presence, filming over the course of a year as Sabine and her employees style hair and nails, dispense romantic advice, and share stories about life back home. The resulting cinematic “chamber piece” captures the day-to-day lives and concerns of immigrant West African women in a space they can call their own.
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The Lepercq Charitable Foundation
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