COME, I’LL SHOW YOU

MORRIS DANCING HIS WAY TO HAPPINESS

Morris wants to be a dancer more than anything in the world. His father strongly objects: he wants Morris to get a respectable job in the family’s drinking water business. But Morris can’t suppress his passion and his father eventually throws him out of the house. Now Morris has to fight his way on the street. Will his father prove right — that you can’t make a living with dance? Or will Morris’s dream become reality?
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In case your browser doesn’t allow the video to be automatically available, please click here to be re-directed to YouTube: DANSA

COME, I’LL SHOW YOU

MORRIS DANCING HIS WAY TO HAPPINESS

Morris wants to be a dancer more than anything in the world. His father strongly objects: he wants Morris to get a respectable job in the family’s drinking water business. But Morris can’t suppress his passion and his father eventually throws him out of the house. Now Morris has to fight his way on the street. Will his father prove right — that you can’t make a living with dance? Or will Morris’s dream become reality?
&nbsp
In case your browser doesn’t allow the video to be automatically available, please click here to be re-directed to YouTube: DANSA

COME, I’LL SHOW YOU THE

FILMMAKERS

Director + Screenplay Mohamed Janneh
Story Aminata Drynee Bockarie
Director of Photography Nana Osei Kyei Mensah, William Dumbuya
Editor Nana Osei Kyei Mensah, Josephus Maligie Sankoh, Mohamed Alarini Bah, William Dumbuya
Assistant Director Kombrabai T. Kamara
Sound + Light Charles Owusu, Fatu Kargbo
Costumes + Maske Up Dorcas Nawiene
Assistant Production Manager Nathaniel Metzger
Continuity Nate A. Asamoah
Catering Fatu Kargbo

COME, I’LL SHOW YOU THE

FILMMAKERS

Director + Screenplay

Mohamed Janneh

Story

Aminata Drynee Bockarie

Director of Photography

Nana Osei Kyei Mensah, William Dumbuya

Editor

Nana Osei Kyei Mensah, Josephus Maligie Sankoh, Mohamed Alarini Bah, William Dumbuya

Assistant Director

Kombrabai T. Kamara

Sound + Light

Charles Owusu, Fatu Kargbo

Costumes + Maske Up

Dorcas Nawiene

Assistant Production Manager

Nathaniel Metzger

Continuity

Nate A. Asamoah

Catering

Fatu Kargbo

COME, I’LL SHOW YOU THE

FILM INFORMATION

Type Fiction
Length 30:14 min.
Language Krio with English subtitles
Country of origin Sierra Leone
Year 2017

COME, I’LL SHOW YOU THE

FILM INFORMATION

Type

Fiction

Length

30:14 min.

Language

Krio with English subtitles

Country of origin

Sierra Leone

Year

2017

COME, I’LL SHOW YOU THE COUNTRY OF ORIGIN

SIERRA LEONE

Sierra Leone (officially the Republic of Sierra Leone) borders Guinea in the north and Liberia in the southeast. Freetown is the country’s capital and economic centre. English is the official language of this former British colony, but most people speak Krio.
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Over a thousand schools were destroyed during the civil war that lasted from 1991 to 2002. Following the Ebola epidemic (2014-2016), the country is now working to rebuild state and social infrastructure. Both Sierra Leone’s constitution and the 2004 Education Act mandate nine years of compulsory basic education, but full compliance is not possible due to a lack of schools and teachers. The literacy rate of the adult population in 2015 was 48.1% (women: 37.7%, men: 58.7%).
>/br>
Sierra Leone has a great variety of media. After a long debate, 2013 saw the passing of a freedom of information law. Sierra Leone ranked 85th out of 180 countries on the 2020 World Press Freedom Index, published by Reporters without Borders.

COME, I’LL SHOW YOU THE COUNTRY OF ORIGIN

SIERRA LEONE

Sierra Leone (officially the Republic of Sierra Leone) borders Guinea in the north and Liberia in the southeast. Freetown is the country’s capital and economic centre. English is the official language of this former British colony, but most people speak Krio.
>/br>
Over a thousand schools were destroyed during the civil war that lasted from 1991 to 2002. Following the Ebola epidemic (2014-2016), the country is now working to rebuild state and social infrastructure. Both Sierra Leone’s constitution and the 2004 Education Act mandate nine years of compulsory basic education, but full compliance is not possible due to a lack of schools and teachers. The literacy rate of the adult population in 2015 was 48.1% (women: 37.7%, men: 58.7%).
>/br>
Sierra Leone has a great variety of media. After a long debate, 2013 saw the passing of a freedom of information law. Sierra Leone ranked 85th out of 180 countries on the 2020 World Press Freedom Index, published by Reporters without Borders.