AFRICAN ODYSSEYS

Bushman

USA 1971, 73 mins
Director: David Schickele


+ intro with Journey Mercies director Tomisin Adepeju

David Schickele’s 1971 film Bushman begins in enigmatic fashion. We’re greeted by sounds of a dog barking, trees swaying in the wind, melodious and soothing bird sounds. Without any visuals to frame our imagination, the Iowa-born filmmaker immediately transports us to a rural, dreamlike landscape. We are then introduced to our protagonist Gabriel, played by Paul Okpokam, a young Black man photographed in resplendent black and white. He walks barefoot in a desolate section of an unidentified city, his shoes masterfully balancing on his head. As Gabriel observes the city, the camera, restless, follows him – the visuals reminiscent of the cinéma vérité style of Jean-Luc Godard’s Breathless (1960) and John Cassavetes’ Shadows (1958).

The opening title card illuminates the world further: the year is 1968, and Martin Luther King, Robert Kennedy and Bobby Hutton (a Black Panther killed by Oakland police) are among the recent dead. We also discover that in Nigeria, the civil war is entering its second year. A tribal chant in Igbo (the ethnic language of southeastern Nigeria) subtly builds as Schickele takes us to Nigeria where we see a young boy and girl walking barefoot, a yam balanced on their heads. They are surrounded by woodlands as they hurriedly navigate their familiar terrain.

In these opening seconds a vision of rural life is potently juxtaposed against an urban one. We see two cultures at an important moment in history. Schickele uses Gabriel to interrogate the cultural and political climate of this tumultuous period. We learn that Gabriel has recently travelled from Nigeria to America to study and eventually teach at San Francisco State College.

Through a series of intimate conversations with Gabriel, we are transported to his life in Nigeria. Bushman is a complex and compelling snapshot of his past, present and uncertain future. Erudite and articulate, he addresses the camera: ‘At night, we sit around the log fire, listening to folktales…’ Through photographs of a young Gabriel and luminous snapshots of village life, we are transported to his memory and recollections of a home informed by religion, ancient traditions and community.

Gabriel is a complex and multifaceted character: a man plagued by secrets from his past, his life drastically altered by the devastating impact of Nigeria’s civil war. At 27, he leaves his homeland for new pastures.

In San Francisco, he is forced to navigate his new environment as an outsider. He is fetishised, stereotyped and othered: ‘Why don’t you say something in African for me?’ ‘You ain’t one of ours, where did you come from?’ – Gabriel’s cultural traditions and way of life are interrogated by the lovers and strangers he meets on his adventures in the land of the ‘free’. In one of his intimate interview-style monologues, Gabriel tells us: ‘A traveller is like a ghost, he keeps going, crosses the rivers, passes through darkness, flies with the birds, until he comes to a land where nobody knows him.’ This profound and poetic expression of Gabriel’s journey is emblematic of the shared immigrant experience – one that I can deeply relate to as a British-Nigerian man.

Maya Angelou, the memoirist and poet, once wrote: ‘The ache for home lives in all of us, the safe place where we can go as we are and not be questioned.’ This vision of home tragically eludes our hero – a point which is further anchored by a shift in the film’s tone and form. The director abruptly interrupts his own work to announce, via voiceover, that the actor playing Gabriel has been falsely accused of terrorism and has subsequently been imprisoned. What began as a fictional tale evolves into an extraordinary exploration of real events. The star becomes the subject. Gabriel might be a ghost, but Paul is unable to escape life’s harsh realities. His fate is inexplicably tied to the systematic prejudice of his time.

While most filmmakers might have abandoned the project all together at this point, Schickele is committed to authentically capturing truth on screen. His early filmography is proof of this fierce devotion to realism. Give Me a Riddle (1966), the hour-long documentary which he produced and directed for the Peace Corps while he was working as a volunteer for them at the University of Nigeria at Nsukka, captures the bloom and buoyancy of Nigeria’s youth at a pivotal point in the country’s history. It was on Give Me a Riddle that he met and formed a life-long friendship with Okpokam, who features prominently in the documentary and who would become Bushman’s persecuted lead.

Made with a seed grant from the American Film Institute, Bushman was Schickele’s second feature and played at New Directors/New Films and the Chicago International Film Festival, where it was nominated for best feature. Following its festival run, however, it was never formally released and has since developed a cult status as a stylish and striking embodiment of 1970s American independent cinema.

Revisited today in the new restoration, the audacity and singularity of Schickele’s vision reflects a rare cinematic voice and sensibility. Bushman is revealed as a work of extraordinary depth, power and beauty. Subverting cinematic form and defying convention, it’s an urgent and poignant exploration of our shared humanity.
Tomisin Adepeju, bfi.org.uk, 24 April 2024

Journey Mercies
A short drama about a library cleaner who plans a final return to Nigeria, his birth country.


Tomisin Adepeju is a British-Nigerian filmmaker based in London. His award-winning shorts have screened at over 150 film festivals, including Sundance, BFI London Film Festival and London Short Film Festival. He has also written about film for MUBI and several other platforms. He is the founder of the screening and event series DAILIES where he regularly curates shorts and feature film programmes.

DAILIES
Founded by filmmaker Tomisin Adepeju, DAILIES curates spaces for film lovers to foster connections, inspire conversations, and spark creativity. We are a platform for film lovers who want to seek out bold and unique films. We work through curated film nights, development programmes, and critical features.

From our cozy beginnings on the couches of a warehouse in 2018 to sold out events in London at Rio Cinema and Rich Mix, DAILIES is not your regular film night. We are here for film lovers who want to seek out bold and unique films that may not be in their local cinema.
dailiesfilm.com

JOURNEY MERCIES
Director: Tomisin Adepeju
UK 2023
15 mins
Digital

BUSHMAN
Director: David Schickele
Production Company: Bushman Company
Production Manager: Gene Doherty
Production Associates: Arnie Cohen, Mary Colwell, Dan Loewenthal, Michael Murray, Rick Paup, Pat Riley, James Spears, Ken Valentine
Script Supervisor: Cindy Harwood
Photographed by: David Myers
Additional Photography by: Stephen Lighthill, Kirk Smallman
Edited by: Jennifer Chinlund, David Schickele
Special Effects: Steve Wax
Sound Recorded by: Paul Oppenheim

Cast
Paul Eyam Nzie Okpokam (Bushman)
Elaine Featherstone (Alma)
Mike Slye (motorcyclist)
Lothario Lotho (Alma’s brother)
James Earl Garrison (friend)
Ann Scofield (white girl)
Shezwae Powell (Black waitress)
Jack Nance (Felix)
David Schickele (Mark)
Donna Michelson (Diane)
Timothy Near (Susie)
Patrick Gleeson (Marty)

USA 1971
73 mins
Digital 4K (restoration)

Restored in 4K in 2022 by University of California, Berkeley Art Museum, Pacific Film Archive and The Film Foundation from the original negatives. Funding provided by the Hobson/Lucas Family Foundation. Additional support provided by Peter Conheim, Cinema Preservation Alliance

An Other Parties Film Company release


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Programme notes and credits compiled by Sight and Sound and the BFI Documentation Unit
Notes may be edited or abridged
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