Mother, I Am Suffocating
Experimental 76" Lesotho/Qatar 2019
Screenwriter/Director/Cinematographer: Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese
Audio post: Guy James Cohen
Services: online editing, color grading, mastering
www.criterionchannel.com
Experimental 76" Lesotho/Qatar 2019
Screenwriter/Director/Cinematographer: Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese
Audio post: Guy James Cohen
Services: online editing, color grading, mastering
www.criterionchannel.com
The people on the dusty streets of Lesotho stare inquisitively at the
young woman, who, like Jesus, carries a wooden cross on her back. She
looks back into their faces, at mystically beautiful landscapes, a herd
of sheep, and a pair of hands that knit unceasingly. What she sees is
rendered more visually precise by the black and white, more abstract by
the slowed-down images, it is filtered through memories. A raw
voice-over – aware that it is not being heard by those being addressed –
structures the flow of images into a cinematic lament.
In this essay film, Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese succeeds in creating the
chronicle of a radicalising sorrow, which steadily increases in scope
from a personal farewell to the mother to a politically aware defection
from the motherland. The painful process of shifting from an internal
view of the small African country to an external one is visualised and
commented on in a profoundly personal way – from the perspective of
today, in exile, in Berlin. A pretty angel accompanies the passage. In
intense, aching fashion, this unusual lament on an African story of
migration sheds light on an realm of experience that is taboo and not
only in cinema.





