Also included in the 4-disc boxset, Prisms and Portraits: The Films of Rosine Mbakam.
Sabine’s hands move quickly and precisely as she tightly braids hair in her tiny salon. The sign outside offers African, European, or American hairstyles. Sabine is a charismatic, larger than-life personality crammed into a tiny shop in the immigrant Brussels district of Matonge. Here, she and her employees style extensions and glue on lashes while watching soaps, dishing romantic advice, sharing rumors about government programs to legalize migrants, and talking about life back home in West Africa.
At the start of Chez Jolie Coiffure, director Rosine Mbakam, who made waves with her impressive debut film, the Icarus Films release The Two Faces of a Bamileke Woman, stands outside the salon, filming. Sabine calls her in, warning her it’s unsafe out in hallway of the cramped urban mall. Mbakam sets up in the shop—and stays, filming over the course of a year, becoming a regular fixture and presence. This cinematic “chamber piece,” which takes place entirely inside a salon not much larger than a take-out stand, makes skillful use of its many mirrors.
More than a place for women to get their hair done, Jolie Coiffure serves as a community hub for West African women—many from Cameroon, like Sabine. Fueled by endless cans of soda and cups of McDonald’s coffee, she recruits for a tontine—an investment scheme paying each member a yearly annuity, organizes accommodation for a pregnant woman who lacks immigration papers, and, in quieter, more introspective moments, tells her own harrowing journey to Belgium after working as a domestic under terrible conditions in Lebanon.
Though she has created a home in her own space, Sabine remains an outsider in Belgium. Students and tourist groups made up only of white people walk past, pausing at the window and gawking. (At one point, Sabine urges Mbakam to turn her camera on them so they’ll go away; the director obliges.) When word has it that the immigration police are coming through, she hurriedly turns off all the lights and quickly vanishes out the door.
Chez Jolie Coiffure is a highly revealing documentary, capturing the day-to-day lives and concerns of immigrant West African women in a space they can call their own.
"An original filmmaker of exquisite sensibility; one of the foremost filmmakers of creative nonfiction working right now." —Richard Brody, The New Yorker
"Critic's Pick! Rosine Mbakam makes a remarkable debut; demonstrates a mastery of perspective, a rare ability to include the camera in community." —The New York Times
"Unequivocally extracts a powerful sense of empathy—and urgency." —Vox Magazine
"Riveting; extraordinary. A reflection on the itinerancy and multiplicity of identities, on the possibilities and limitations of placemaking. Reveals the historical wounds wrought by colonialism." —The Black Scholar
"A must-see! Highly revealing, an atypical and timely portrait of the intersection between the immigrant experience and female identity.” —IndieWire
Spirit of the Festival Prize, Light Film Festival 2019
True/False Film Festival 2019
AFI Docs Film Festival 2019
New York African Film Festival 2019
FESPACO Film Festival 2019
Unorthodox Film Festival 2019
DOK Leipzig Film Festival 2018