Part of my coverage of the 60th Chicago International Film Festival
ON BECOMING A GUINEA FOWL ***1/2
IDEA: After a woman finds her uncle dead in the middle of a road, darks secrets held by her middle-class Zambian family come to the surface.
BLURB: Guinea fowls, as explained in a fictional children’s educational TV show within the film, are chatty creatures that come together to alert other animals on the Savannah of danger. The sprawling, multigenerational family of women in On Becoming a Guinea Fowl are certainly vocal, befitting the metaphor, but they aren’t saying what needs to be said. While they ululate, grieve, comfort, commiserate, blame, and cast aspersions, they remain silent on the patriarchal abuse that has riven their community. Using elements of the horror genre - dark hallways and corners, a dissonantly thrumming score, a dead body and a haunting - Nyoni creates a plangently unnerving allegory of the burdens so many women are forced to bear at the hands of men, especially in societies where misogyny has become internalized as a matter of fact. Far from an idealized picture of female solidarity, the sisterhood portrayed in the film is an unwieldy and volatile organism, comprising an array of attitudes and temperaments on ideas of mourning, love, duty, bargaining, and reconciliation. In a sad but hopeful irony, it falls on the most reticent of the film’s characters, Shula, to become the guinea fowl when her relatives can’t heed the warning of their own unrelenting cries.