Aïcha Boro reflects on her beginnings in cinema, marked by an tireless search for poetry and truth and shaped by her literary studies. The filmmaker compares cinema to journalism, highlighting that while the former seeks a poetic truth, the latter pursues a factual truth. This commitment to truth is at the heart of her film “Al Djanat”, where she explores deep Mandingo roots and the importance of cultural identity. Her cinema is a bridge that connects cultures, offering a sincere vision of human identity. With an enduring passion for storytelling, she celebrates diversity and always keeps universal emotion at the forefront, reflecting the filmmaker’s moral responsibility towards her subjects.
Chloé Aïcha Boro was born in Dedougou, Burkina Faso. After graduating in Literature, she began her career as a journalist in the written press before moving into audiovisual work. She won the Galian Prize in 2005 as host of the television programme Koodo. In 2006, the publisher L'Harmattan released her autobiographical novel Paroles d'orpheline. In 2012 she co-directed the African festival "Cases Normandes" in Normandy. That same year she made her first film, "Sur les traces de Salimata". Her first feature-length documentary, "Farafin Ko", co-directed in 2014, was selected and awarded at several international festivals. Her latest film, "Al Djanat", won the jury prize at the fifth edition of Majordocs for the director's "objective, intimate and profound gaze" at her family within Mandingo culture.
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