Soleil Ô


Soleil Ô is a 1970 French-Mauritanian drama film written and directed by Med Hondo.
The title refers to a West Indian song that tells of the pain of the black people from Dahomey who were taken to the Caribbean as slaves.

Premise

A black immigrant makes his way to Paris in search of his Gaul ancestors. The immigrants desperately seek work and a place to live, but find themselves face to face with indifference, rejection, and humiliation, before heeding the final call for uprising.

Cast

  • Robert Liensol as Visitor
  • Théo Légitimus as Afro Girl
  • Gabriel Glissand
  • Bernard Fresson as Friend
  • Yane Barry as White Girl
  • Greg Germain
  • Armand Meffre
  • Med Hondo as the narrator

    Reception

The film played during the International Critics' Week at the 1970 Cannes Film Festival, where it received critical acclaim. It received a Golden Leopard award at the 1970 Locarno International Film Festival.
In his Family Guide to Movies on Video, Henry Herx wrote that the film's "use of ironic humor and lively music keeps the plight of the black emigrant worker from becoming totally depressing."
In The New Yorker, Richard Brody wrote: "Making friends among France's white population, finds their empathy condescending and oblivious, and his sense of isolation and persecution raises his identity crisis to a frenzied pitch. Hondo offers a stylistic collage to reflect the protagonist’s extremes of experience, from docudrama and musical numbers to slapstick absurdity, from dream sequences and bourgeois melodrama to political analyses."

Restoration

In 2017, Soleil Ô was restored by Cineteca di Bologna. The funding for the restoration came from the George Lucas Family Foundation and the World Cinema Project, as part of the latter's restoration initiative called the African Film Heritage Project.