The Womens' Olamal
by Melissa Llewelyn-Davies
It was extraordinary. There was a huge furore. I mean, lots of people
really hated it and some people loved it, fortunately; but my boss was taken to
task for allowing such a thing onto the air…They even argued among themselves
and people wrote to the papers. I never experienced anything like it before or
since.
- Melissa Llewelyn-Davies on the
first broadcast of The Women’s Olamal
Thursday, January 26, 2017
Atlanta Contemporary | 7:00 pm
$8 admission / $5 for Contemporary supporters with ID
The Women’s Olamal documents a conflict between men and women of
the pastoral Maasai, whose territory is bisected by the political border
separating Tanzania from Kenya. Every four years, Maasai women gather en masse
for a fertility ritual near the border – an event of crucial significance for
women in the community. But in the year that Llewelyn-Davies filmed, a problem
arose. A conflict with a neighboring community complicates the timing of the
fertility ritual, and the elders – all male – suggest the ritual may be
postponed, or even canceled. This throws the women into an unexpected process of
organizing and strategizing to resist the elders’ plan. A chain of increasingly
fraught negotiations is set in motion, laying bare a sharp divide between men
and women and threatening the fragile social harmony.
Devoted to
presenting the experience of Maasai women on film, Llewelyn-Davies produced this
unflinching account of a moment of wrenching crisis and its difficult
resolution. While it follows the classic structure of "crisis narrative" derived
from 1960s documentary, The Women’s Olamal’s climactic sequence of
spontaneous, collective mass protest by women has few precedents in cinema.
Llewelyn-Davies’ focus on women’s point of view – including that women are the
near-exclusive subjects of the film’s fascinating and carefully presented
interviews – is also extraordinary.
Directed and filmed for the BBC,
The Women’s Olamal was broadcast on British national television in the
mid-1980s, where it caused controversy. Since then, the film (like
Llewelyn-Davies’ other remarkable films on Maasai men and women) has been
largely neglected in accounts of feminist cinema, and has even been too-little
covered in its own field of ethnographic cinema. Film Love is proud to present a
rare public screening of this singular work.
The Womens'
Olamal (Melissa Llewelyn-Davies, 1984), 110 minutes
Atlanta Contemporary
535 Means
Street NW
Atlanta, GA, 30318
404.688.1970
atlantacontemporary.org
The Womens' Olamal is a Film Love event. The Film Love series provides access to great but rarely
seen films, especially important works unavailable on consumer video. Programs
are curated and introduced by Andy Ditzler, and feature lively discussion.
Through public screenings and events, Film Love preserves the communal viewing
experience, provides space for the discussion of film as art, and explores
alternative forms of moving image projection and viewing.