1962 | Germany | Documentary,Experimental

Jagdpartie (Hunting Party)

  • German English 40 mins
  • Director | Ibrahim Shaddad
  • Writer | Claus Neumann, Ibrahim Shaddad
  • Producer | V. Pech

STATUS: Released

This film is currently not available.   

This film treatise by a Sudanese director on the subject of racism from the perspective of a white man is set in the style of an American Western. Made as a graduation project at the Potsdam-Babelsberg film academy in Germany, the result is a seemingly curious mix of cowboys speaking German dialogue that echoes the views of the Black filmmaker. The message, however, is simple and direct.

Hunting Party follows a white mob searching for a Black farmworker. The white main protagonist finds himself confronted for the first time with conflicted feelings about the Black man. On the one hand he despises Black people in general; on the other, he knows and feels admiration for this particular Black man. The film works towards the climax of this internal struggle, when the cowboy has to make a choice—and live with the consequences.

Almost 60 years after the making of this 1964 film by Ibrahim Shaddad, a co-founder of what later became the Sudanese Film Group and subject of the documentary Talking About Trees (2019), the themes it explores are unfortunately as relevant as ever.

Drama Experimental Film Western Style Identity Conflict Internal Struggle