Skip to content
RAI FILM
film shop
Ethnographic film catalogue
RAI Film – view on demand
Teaching resources
Prices
RAI film festival
RAI Film Festival 2025
Group rates for RAI Film Festival 2025
Prizes and awards
RAI Film Festival programme 2023
Archive of past editions
Menu
film shop
Ethnographic film catalogue
RAI Film – view on demand
Teaching resources
Prices
RAI film festival
RAI Film Festival 2025
Group rates for RAI Film Festival 2025
Prizes and awards
RAI Film Festival programme 2023
Archive of past editions
RAI FILM
Login
Facebook
Instagram
Twitter
film shop
Ethnographic film catalogue
RAI Film – view on demand
Teaching resources
Prices
RAI film festival
RAI Film Festival 2025
Group rates for RAI Film Festival 2025
Prizes and awards
RAI Film Festival programme 2023
Archive of past editions
Menu
film shop
Ethnographic film catalogue
RAI Film – view on demand
Teaching resources
Prices
RAI film festival
RAI Film Festival 2025
Group rates for RAI Film Festival 2025
Prizes and awards
RAI Film Festival programme 2023
Archive of past editions
Login
Facebook
Instagram
Twitter
Films
found one film
Country
“Angola”
x
films with a digital version
1
Region
South America
1
Southern Africa
1
Country
Angola
1
x
Brazil
1
Keywords
Dance / Theatre / Performance
1
Festivals / Carnival
1
Music / Ethnomusicology
1
Directors
Assunção, Matthias Röhrig
1
Dettmann, Christine
1
Pakleppa, Richard
1
Series
not set
1
Country of production
Brazil
1
South Africa
1
United Kingdom
1
Year of production
2014
1
Film
Body Games – Capoeira and Ancestry
2014
87
‘
Student
Directed by
Richard Pakleppa
Matthias Röhrig Assunção
Christine Dettmann
.
The film follows master Cobra Mansa and his friends in the search for the African roots of the Brazilian martial art Capoeira. A powerful myth links Capoeira to a legendary Angolan game called Engolo – the Zebra dance. The film documents, for the first time, Engolo as well as other combat games, dances and music from the Nyaneka-Humbi people in Southern Angola. The exchange between Capoeira and Engolo in Angolan villages and the insights from the streets of Rio and Bahia illuminate the affinities and differences between combat games and musical bows played on both sides of the Atlantic.
South America
Southern Africa
Dance / Theatre / Performance
Music / Ethnomusicology
Festivals / Carnival
One Response
Pingback:
Dr Cai Hua – Royal Anthropological Institute
One Response