On December 12, “Furcy, né libre”, Abd Al Malik’s new feature film, will be released in Guadeloupe and Martinique. At first glance, this story takes place far from the Caribbean, on the island of La Réunion. But in reality, the story reveals an essential part of the shared history of the overseas territories: that of an identical colonial system, unequal justice and an individual struggle that echoes the experiences of the Caribbean.
A story from Reunion that also speaks to the West Indies
Adapted from Mohammed Aïssaoui’s book “The Case of the Slave Furcytraces the legal battle waged by Furcy, a man enslaved when he should have been free.
This case, tried in the early XIXᵉ century, is based on legal rules derived from the same legal framework that structured the slave societies of Martinique, Guadeloupe and French Guiana.
The transmission of status by the mother, the Black Code, the impossibility for enslaved people to actually take legal action: all these realities were the same in the Caribbean.
This story, though geographically remote, is part of the great common fabric of the French colonial world.
A deep resonance with Caribbean memory
If the film is particularly eagerly awaited in the West Indies, it’s because its subject speaks directly to local memories. In the Caribbean islands, archives also reveal cases of men and women who tried to use the law to defend their rights, sometimes at the risk of their lives. These struggles often go unrecognized, even though they shaped post-slavery society.
The film thus arrives in a territory where questions of justice, law, recognition and colonial legacy continue to inhabit social, cultural and political life. The film doesn’t just tell an ancient story: it reopens contemporary issues that are still sensitive in the Caribbean.
Casting and staging for a shared memory
Makita Samba plays Furcy with restraint and intensity, surrounded by actors such as Romain Duris, Ana Girardot and Vincent Macaigne. Part of the filming took place on Reunion Island, anchoring the story in a geography whose social and landscape structure is reminiscent of the Creole areas of the Caribbean.
Abd Al Malik’s direction is distinguished by a strong choice: not to transform history into a spectacular fresco, but to restore it with sobriety, letting justice, the spoken word and courage guide the narrative. This approach is very much in line with Caribbean approaches to memory, where historical work often draws on intimate accounts to shed light on major collective issues.
Why does this film matter for the Caribbean today?
In a global context marked by debates on colonial legacies, reparations, persistent inequalities and the representation of black trajectories, the film comes at a time when the Caribbean is actively engaged in these reflections. Whether in Guadeloupe, Martinique, Haiti or the English-speaking islands, Caribbean societies are already questioning the same themes: historical justice, recognition, dignity and symbolic reparation.
So the film isn’t just about the past. It is about our memoriesIt’s about our territories, our families, and the way in which colonial narratives continue to influence contemporary imaginations. Through him, a universal question is expressed: how can an individual reverse injustice when it is rooted in an entire system?
A major event for the Caribbean and for France
By choosing to release the film first in Guadeloupe and Martinique, and then in mainland France, distributors are acknowledging the legitimacy of Caribbean audiences in this story. For “Furcy, né libre” is not just a historical film:
it’s a mirror, a shared space where the memories of the French overseas territories intersect, respond and understand each other.
In a region where tales of resistance, endurance and dignity form a powerful identity base, Furcy’s story has a natural place. It is a reminder that, from the Mascarene Islands to the Caribbean, the struggle for freedom has long been multiple, silent, but deeply intertwined.
FAQ
Because the film tells the story of a legal battle waged within the same colonial and legal system that structured the slave societies of Guadeloupe, Martinique and French Guiana. The themes of justice, memory and colonial legacies resonate deeply with the Caribbean region.
Yes. It recounts the court case of Furcy, a man born free but held in slavery, who engaged in a legal battle lasting over thirty years at the beginning of the XIXᵉ century for recognition of his rights.
“Furcy, né libre” will be released in Guadeloupe and Martinique on December 12, before its national release in mainland France.