· 2019 · 5m

Egungun (Ancestor Can't Find Me)

Egungun (Ancestor Can't Find Me) poster
Director
Cast
Synopsis

The word bone translates to yoruba as “bones.” In Egungun: Ancestor Can’t Find Me, a shell-covered sea creature swims emerges form the Gulf of Mexico and wanders island jungles and shores. The shelled creature we see wandering in this film bears traits of both male (egungun) and female (gelede) ancestors. The chasm of time, distance and violence has severed its link to the living leaving it to look and listen for traces of our lives in an endless disorienting loop. The film references the ancestor-reverent Egungun masking tradition of the Yoruba people who, indigenous to modern-day Ghana, Benin, Togo, and Nigeria, were among the many African ethnic groups captured, enslaved and sold as chattel into the Transatlantic Slave trade.

Key Collaborators
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Cauleen Smith directed Egungun (Ancestor Can't Find Me). Explore their complete filmography and the collaborators who shaped their vision.

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