La cage (1963) Poster

(1963)

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6/10
Mamy Watta...
manfromplanetx6 September 2019
This unusual classic drama is a co -production between France and Gabon. Documentary footage opens the tale which looks to be the swearing in of the new President, part of Gabon's 1960 independence ceremony ? Is it any wonder the meandering story has such a mish-mash of ideas there are eight writers credited... Top billed is Marina Vlady playing Isabelle a mysterious enchanting ethereal beauty, but it is some time before she makes the first of her brief and fleeting appearances. Having studied medicine in France a young doctor Philippe Mory comes back to his native Gabon and takes charge of a vaccination project. He encounters opposition from the superstitious locals and a sceptical jungle hardened white man, Jean Servais. The lush Gabon setting could be but is far from idyllic, using a backdrop of an exploitive forest logging operation, disturbing to this veteran forest activist is watching the actual felling of ancient forest giants. We watch in intimate detail the native workers chopping away at a huge buttressed tree sending it crashing to the ground. Brooding Docteur Philippe has been distracted, deservedly so after his mysterious encounters with Isabelle,the main attraction of this interesting but rather silly concoction....
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7/10
Daktari (of a mouse and men)
dbdumonteil6 April 2017
After studying medicine in France ,David comes back to his native Gabon to treat his compatriots.He meets Oyana ,his former sweetheart ,and both laugh at the old-fashioned traditions ,some of which have lingered then(1963):one sees a swap: a woman for a she-goat.

The young physician is sent to the bush where he is to vaccinate the somewhat reluctant population.His first patient,scared to death by the syringe, takes to his heels

He meets Rispal, a white man who tells him there are things he ignores in his own country where legends ,witches and superstitions abound.The usual situation is reversed : David,the native,the black man,represents the modern scientific side whilst Ripal,the white seasoned middle- age raider seems to believe in sorcery,in the magic of a strange liquor ,in ancient rites ...

The Rispal/David relationship is ambiguous :are they really friends? Most amazing thing,this embittered man has a wife,Isabelle ,a beautiful woman ,who wanders through the bush.She seems to be always alone ,as though she was imprisoned in the cage made by the branches of the mangroves .David is spellbound ,at night she comes back to haunt him,and asks him to get rid of her husband so they will find happiness together.

The first part of this Gabon-French co-production is close to documentary;with Isabelle's appearance ,halfway through, the movie is plunged into a strange atmosphere with something of Edgar Poe: Isabelle appears first on a portrait hanging on the wall .Then little by little ,an idea dawns upon the viewer:Is Isabelle real?Is Risdal's wife the pet mouse he keeps in a small cage?Does the white man want to challenge the young black scientist?And his fiancée thinks that she might be the legendary White Woman (Mamy Watta,alternate title of the film) who inflames the black man's desire.

It was actually a collaboration between a seasoned director ,Robert Darène whose early efforts were largely disappointing (with the exception of "Les Chiffonniers D'Emmaus")and a young one:Philippe Maury (also actor) it was a film done for research degree (Grande Ecole Des Hautes Etudes Cinematographiques )

Almost entirely filmed on location,"La Cage" takes advantage of the superb landscapes ,particulary when the ghostly Isabelle (ideally portrayed by Marina Vlady ,whose mysterious beauty works wonders) wanders through the mangroves at dawn .Jean Servais who co-wrote the dialogue is well cast as the raider who's seen it all before .Many natives are featured,using their own language.

"La Cage" is an unsettling work,which would deserve to be more widely known.

Like this ? try these:

-"L'Esclave Blanc"(Jean-Paul Paulin ,1936)

-"Orfeo Negro" (Marcel Camus ,1958)
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