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Diary of a Maasai Village series
Filmmaker Name:
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Melissa Llewelyn-Davies
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Film Length:
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250 min
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Film Year:
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1985
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Duration:
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Over 120 min
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Decade:
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1980s
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Color:
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color
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Region:
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Africa
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Subject:
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Indigenous Peoples
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"A rich man in Maasai has children and cows.... and he has wives - many wives."
This series of five films by Melissa Llewelyn-Davies looks at daily life among the Maasai. The films are presented as a diary of a 7-week visit to a single village. The structure is episodic and the content dependent on various events or stories, some of which are developed through more than one film. The tapes can be used independently or together, to give an in-depth sense of Maasai life.
The senior man in the village is the most important Maasai prophet and magician who is known as the Laibon. He is regarded as a wealthy man because he has so many wives and children. He has 13 wives living in the village as well as a large number of children, about 20 daughters-in-law, and 30 grandchildren. All the main characters in the films are somehow related to the Laibon, who was nearly 80 years old when the films were made.
A common thread to the events of all five films is the ever-present anxiety about the state of the herds. These appear to be slowly depleting due to drought, disease and an increasing need to sell livestock for cash. Cash and/or livestock are needed by the Laibon and his kin to trade for wives, to pay off debts and to compensate for previous thefts.
Films in the Diary of a Maasai Village Series
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