Please note that limited galleries remain open while we install our upcoming exhibitions. Learn more

Still from The Bloodettes
Screenings

The Bloodettes / Naked Reality

  • This is a past program

Presented by the UCLA Film & Television Archive.

Part of the UCLA Film & Television Archive screening series African Futurism: The World of Jean-Pierre Bekolo. Learn more at cinema.ucla.edu.

In person: Director Jean-Pierre Bekolo

“Africans are supposed to be real and you get into a situation where the imaginary becomes the luxury of the bourgeois.”—Jean-Pierre Bekolo

Cameroonian writer-director Jean-Pierre Bekolo has never accepted the narrow expectations that the West places on African filmmakers. Indeed, he actively defies labels, mashing up genres and styles across a body of work that feels deeply grounded in the local even as it takes flight on visionary wings. An intoxicating swirl of magic and technology, folklore and genre, sensuality and politics energizes all of his work, from his debut feature Quartier Mozart (1992) to his biggest international hit The Bloodettes (2005) to the spellbinding Afrofuturist experimentation of Naked Reality (2016). In rejecting Western concepts of realism, Bekolo’s films are nevertheless deeply engaged with transforming material and political reality. It’s a stance summed up by the provocative on-screen question that concludes the futuristic action-horror fusion of The Bloodettes: “How can you watch a film like this and do nothing after?” Bekolo cut his teeth in the 1980s as an editor with Cameroon’s national television station and directing music videos before studying with film semiotician Christian Metz at the Institut National de l’Audiovisuel in Paris. Returning to Cameroon under the influence of Melvin Van Peebles, Charles Burnett, and Spike Lee and riding the optimism that suffused independent film in the 1990s to direct his first feature, Bekolo was only 25 when Quartier Mozart found international distribution after premiering at Locarno. When the possibilities of the 1990s proved as illusionary as ever, Bekolo expanded his activities into documentary and academia, engaging widely with aesthetics, political science and philosophy including a four-hour documentary on the work of Congolese intellectual V.Y. Midimbe, author of The Invention of Africa (1988). Currently the 2024 McMillan-Stewart Fellow in Distinguished Filmmaking at Harvard University, Bekolo and his work are receiving renewed attention and the Archive is pleased to have him as a guest for this two-night survey of his work. 

The Bloodettes [Les Saignantes] (2005)

Jean-Pierre Bekolo has described this futuristic action-horror fusion as a “trance object” and it’s possible to experience his lo-fi world building through precisely orchestrated music cues, bold visual compositions and ethereal voiceover as a form of incantation. In Cameroon 2025 when, we are told, “not much has changed,” Majolie (Adèle Ado) and Chouchou (Dorylia Calmel) are best friends and sex workers, a.k.a. Bloodettes, who turn the death of a government official in Majolie’s bed into an opportunity to transform their own destinies. Whipsmart and wildly entertaining, Bloodettes mobilizes myth and genre to satirize patriarchy, masculine posing and political corruption.

DCP, color, in French with English subtitles, 97 min. Director: Jean-Pierre Bekolo. Screenwriter: Jean-Pierre Bekolo. With: Adèle Ado, Dorylia Calmel Emile, Abossolo M'bo.

Naked Reality (2016)

150 years in the future, Wanita (Weza Da Silva) is a young African media professional who becomes aware of a race of immortal beings who secretly control reality after she herself becomes dislodged from the linear flow of time. The title of Bekolo’s vivid experimental feature reflects Wanita’s galvanizing revelation as well as his larger meta-commentary on the media’s production of meaning and images of Africa, specifically. Her consciousness liberated, Wanita enters a dimension of green screen sets that become the field on which Bekolo projects an array of dazzling video and montage effects as she confronts the immortals — with support from her spiritual ancestors — to free humanity from its fate.

DCP, b&w, 62 min. Director: Jean-Pierre Bekolo. Screenwriter: Jean-Pierre Bekolo. With: Weza Da Silva, Luthuli Dlamini, Akin Omotoso.

ATTENDING THIS PROGRAM?

Ticketing: Admission to Archive screenings at the Hammer is free. Your seat will be assigned to you when you pick up your ticket at the box office. Seats are assigned on a first come, first served basis. Box office opens one hour before the event. Questions should be directed to the Archive at programming@cinema.ucla.edu or 310-206-8013.

Member Benefit: Subject to availability, Hammer Members can choose their preferred seats. Members receive priority ticketing until 15 minutes before the program. Learn more about membership.

Parking: Valet parking is available on Lindbrook Drive for $15 cash only. Self-parking is available under the museum. Rates are $8 for the first three hours with museum validation, and $3 for each additional 20 minutes, with a $22 daily maximum. There is an $8 flat rate after 5 p.m. on weekdays, and all day on weekends.

Read our food, bag check, and photo policies.
Read our COVID-19 safety guidelines.

♿ Accessibility information