Title from sell sheet. Originally produced in 2021. Wide screen (1.78:1). Special features: Three short films by Beshir; trailer; plus: an essay by film scholar Yasmin Price.
Summary:
A sublime work of personal vision, the debut feature by the Mexican Ethiopian filmmaker Jessica Beshir is a hypnotic documentary immersion in the world of Ethiopia₂s Oromo community, a place where one commodity khat, a euphoria-inducing plant once prized for its supposedly mystical properties holds sway over the rituals and rhythms of everyday life. As if under the influence of the drug itself, Faya Dayi unfurls as intoxicating, trance state cinema, capturing intimate moments in the existence of everyone from the harvesters of the crop to people lost in its narcotic haze to a desperate but determined younger generation searching for an escape from the region₂s political strife. The director₂s exquisite monochrome cinematography each frame a masterpiece sculpted from light and shadow and the film₂s time-bending, elliptical editing create a ravishing sensory experience that hovers between consciousness and dreaming.
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