Saloum @ The Grand Illusion

Not your average Western šŸ¤ 

šŸ“ø: TIFF

Plays from Sept 16-29

What if I told you there was a Senegalese Spaghetti Western action horror crime thriller? The Grand Illusion has you covered with Saloum, a wild genre hybrid that racked up accolades on the film festival circuit and is now making its way into arthouse theaters primed for its blend of thrills, chills, and African-Caribbean folklore.

Itā€™s 2003, and a trio of mercenaries known as Banguiā€™s Hyenas have just escaped from Guinea-Bissau with a bounty in tow: a Mexican drug dealer and his gold stash. But when their plane is shot down in the coastal Sine-Saloum Delta, hundreds of kilometers from their Dakar destination, they must lay low and figure out their next course of action. As they make good with the locals at a holiday retreat, something from the past haunts themā€¦something spoooooooky.

Itā€™s a lot to pack into 80 minutes, and thatā€™s what makes the film so alluring; itā€™s not so much channel-surfing as a Fast & Furious style nitro boost every 15 minutes or so until the movie careens into the end credits. Itā€™s an exhilarating exercise in excess from Congolese director Jean Luc Herbulot (Netflixā€™s paranormal police procedural Sakho & Mangane), and not really like anything else out in theaters this year.

(Full disclosure: I volunteer at the Grand Illusion. Itā€™sĀ 100% run by volunteers, andĀ everyoneĀ should volunteer there.)

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Author

Marcus Gorman

Marcus Gorman is a Seattle-based playwright and film programmer. He once raised money for a synagogue by marathoning 15 Adam Sandler movies in one weekend. You can find him on Instagram and Twitter @marcus_gorman.