New Jersey Stage logo
New Jersey Stage Menu


?>

 

New Release Review - "On Becoming A Guinea Fowl"


By Eric Hillis, TheMovieWaffler.com

originally published: 12/04/2024


As a children's show within writer/director Rungano Nyoni's second feature informs us, the guinea fowl is a bird known for its ability to ward off predators by gathering in groups and using its squawk to alert other birds to approaching threats. The film's protagonist, Shula (Susan Chardy), a middle class Zambian woman, can't get the childhood memory of that show out of her head. When we meet her first she's driving home from a costume party, decked out in a homemade guinea fowl costume. As Nyoni's film unspools, Shula's reasons for admiring the selflessness of the guinea fowl will become painfully clear. By a strange coincidence it's the second movie to arrive in recent weeks, following Andrea Arnold's Bird, in which a bird is employed as a metaphor for a protector against abuse.

While driving home from the aforementioned party, Shula finds the body of a middle-aged man lying on the side of the road. On close inspection she realises it's her uncle Fred. The ensuing scenes, which see a frustrated and dispassionate Shula frown as she struggles with her chaotic family members and the unreliable local police, suggest we're in for a Trouble with Harry-esque black comedy. But the laughs soon dry up as the truth about Fred's past slowly emerges.

As we meet Shula's extended family we realise they have mythologised Fred as a loveable scoundrel, a ladies man. His corpse was laid out suspiciously close to a brothel, suggesting he probably suffered a heart attack in a moment of exuberance. But while the older women weep, the younger women of the family slowly gather in support as they take the opportunity of Fred's passing to reveal his legacy of abuse.

Some of the women-directed films to emerge in the wake of the MeToo movement have hinted at the culpability of women in protecting predatory men (The AssistantBlink Twice), but none more so than On Becoming a Guinea Fowl. The older women of Fred's family are happy to throw his victims under the bus in order to protect their family name. Fred's teenage wife, who bore his first child when she was merely 11, is cruelly dismissed as a gold digger and even blamed for his death, accused of not keeping him sufficiently well fed. This idea of a woman's place being in the kitchen echoes through the film, with Shula constantly being ordered to make breakfast or cook chicken for the mourners. The film's best scene sees an anxious Shula try to corral her uncle's various young victims while fending off countless requests to provide food for the male mourners. After confronting her father with Fred's legacy, Shula is encouraged to leave it in the past, the conversation ending with her insensitively being asked to fetch more ice cubes.

On Becoming a Guinea Fowl marks the acting debut of Zambian-British model Chardy, who comes out of the gate with one of the year's most engaging performances. Nyoni denies her leading lady any Oscar speech moments, instead forcing her to tell Shula's story largely through reactive gestures. Chardy is brilliant at portraying the unspoken frustration of being surrounded by those who have yet to catch up with your progressive ideals; Shula spends much of the film being told how she should behave, and we see the exasperation behind her eyes. The code-switching of Shula's accent serves to communicate much about her relationship with whomever she happens to be conversing with at any given time. In her most frustrated moments she speaks with a clipped British accent, as though her frustration is directed not just at her family but at Zambia itself. It's a subtle implication that she has spent time abroad and desperately wants her homeland to make the progress she's experienced elsewhere. As with Nyoni's debut, I Am Not a Witch, and the likes of Sarmad Masud and the McDonagh brothers' unflattering portraits of their ancestral homes of Pakistan and Ireland, it once again raises the thorny issue of whether a country's ills should be critiqued by a British-based member of its diaspora rather than a resident native, but as Nyoni makes all too clear here, this is a particular ill Zambia isn't yet willing to confront.




New Jersey Stage provides affordable advertising for the arts, click here for info



The lack of explicit confrontation in Nyoni's film may prove frustrating to viewers, but that's the point. Shula is trapped in a society unwilling to have a conversation about gender politics. The most women of an older generation can offer her is sympathy; justice simply isn't on the table. But in the sorority that develops between Shula and her uncle's young victims we're given a picture of hope, a suggestion that the young women of Zambia may be set to adopt the ways of the guinea fowl and rally together to defend themselves against predators.

Directed by: Rungano Nyoni

Starring: Susan Chardy, Elizabeth Chisela, Henry B.J. Phiri, Roy Chisha, Blessings Bhamjee



Eric Hillis is a film critic living in Sligo, Ireland who runs the website TheMovieWaffler.com



New Jersey Stage provides affordable advertising for the arts, click here for info



EVENT PREVIEWS

(LAMBERTVILLE, NJ) -- Join the Acme Screening Room and Flemington DIY on Saturday, May 16, 2026 for the documentary "TCB: The Toni Cade Bambara School of Organizing" plus live Jazz with the Jerome Jennings Quintet. The event begins at 6:00pm.
Atlantic County Film Club & Eammon Films present a screening of "The Chronology of Water" on May 18th

Atlantic County Film Club & Eammon Films present a screening of "The Chronology of Water" on May 18th

(ATLANTIC CITY, NJ) -- Atlantic County Film Club & Eammon Films present a screening of The Chronology of Water at Anchor Rock Club on Monday, May 18, 2026 at 7:30pm. Based on the beloved memoir by Lidia Yuknavitch, this film is a raw and unflinching portrait of survival, sexuality, and self-invention.
Trenton Filmmaker Phillip McConnell to Premiere New Short Film "Tell Me Where We Stand"

Trenton Filmmaker Phillip McConnell to Premiere New Short Film "Tell Me Where We Stand"

(HAMILTON TOWNSHIP, NJ) -- Independent filmmaker Phillip McConnell will premiere his new short film, Tell Me Where We Stand, at Mill One on Sunday, May 31, 2026, bringing together local artists, performers, and members of the community for an evening celebrating independent film and storytelling.
2026 New Jersey International Film Festival to Take Place from May 29th to June 7th

2026 New Jersey International Film Festival to Take Place from May 29th to June 7th

(NEW BRUNSWICK, NJ) -- The Rutgers Film Co-op/New Jersey Media Arts Center, in association with the Rutgers University Program in Cinema Studies, presents the 2026 New Jersey International Film Festival which marks their 31st Anniversary. The NJIFF competition will be taking place on the Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays between May 29 - June 7, 2026 and will be a hybrid one as they will be presenting it online as well as doing in-person screenings at Rutgers University.
Emmy-nominated, Tony and Grammy Award-winning actor/director Jason Alexander to Lead Acting Masterclass on Long Beach Island

Emmy-nominated, Tony and Grammy Award-winning actor/director Jason Alexander to Lead Acting Masterclass on Long Beach Island

(LONG BEACH ISLAND, NJ) -- The Lighthouse International Film Festival (LIFF) presents a rare five-day acting masterclass led by acclaimed actor and director Jason Alexander, taking place June 7–11, 2026 on Long Beach Island, New Jersey, just prior to the opening of the Festival's 18th edition, which runs June 10–14.

 

MORE EVENTS

Click on the listing to bring up its webpage







 

Advertise with NJ Stage for $50-$100 per month, click here for info