by Isabelle Boni-Claverie
Ivory Coast and France / 2004 / 20mins / Drama / French
Muriel, a young métisse comes to Marseille to bury her mother, who she hasn't seen for years. Unable to bear the heavy weight of family rituals she flees in the night, ending up in central Marseille. She meets and follows a bachelor party, thrown for Samir. Muriel leaves with Samir, and the night has only just begun...
Isabelle Boni-Claverie
Isabelle Boni-Claverie was born in 1972 in Ivory Coast in a mixed French and Ivorian family. Isabelle's writing talent was first noticed when she was only 18. Her novel La Grande Dévoreuse (The Great Devourer) received an award at "Le Prix du Jeune Ecrivain Francophone" and was published by Les Editions de La Découverte. Ten years later it was published again, in Ivory Coast this time, by NEI. From 1993 to 2005, Isabelle wrote for several news magazines and publications like the very prestigious Revue Noire, dedicated to African Contemporary Art. In 2000 she graduated from La Fémis, one of the best film schools in France. She specialized in screenwriting and assisted young French and International filmmakers with their scripts. Meanwhile, she directed her own short films and documentaries, all of them widely screened at international film festivals and/or multi-awarded. Since 2007, Isabelle has worked on very popular TV programs and more "art house" cinema projects. She is especially well-known in France for her documentary Too Black to be French?, which was very well received both by the media and audience when it was broadcast on the Franco-German television channel ARTE in 2015. Isabelle Boni-Claverie lives and works in Paris. Learn More