A group of children, fleeing the war, is taken to Luanda accompanied by a nun. When they reach the aeroplane, 12-year-old N’Dala decides to leave the group and to reconnoitre the city. The nun then starts her unceasing quest for the missing boy. N’Dala, only carrying a textile bag and a doll made of wire, walks through the busy streets filled with people and traffic. Later he finds the tranquility of the island off the coast, where he meets the old fisherman Antonio, with whom he becomes friends. Not much later, he meets the lively, whimsical Zé, who is a little older than he is. N’Dala starts to experience the city and its inhabitants as increasingly forbidding and he would most like to return to the countryside from whence he came. Then he meets Joka, a fringe figure who persuades him to help with a robbery in exchange for money. With this film, Maria Joao Ganga wanted to provide a realistic sketch of the bitter political situation in Angola. One of her most important motivations for making In the Empty City was to provide a picture of an African city without awakening feelings of a patronising sympathy or associations with the sensationalism of war.
Film details
Countries of production
Angola, Portugal
Year
2004
Festival edition
IFFR 2004
Length
90'
Medium/Format
35mm
Language
Portuguese
Premiere status
World premiere
Director
Maria Joao Ganga
Producer
François Gonot, Integrada Producoes, Animatografo 2