Le Bleu blanc rouge de mes cheveux
Josza Anjembe

17-year-old Seyna, who is of Cameroon origins, becomes fascinated by the history of France, the country where she was born and which she deeply loves. Having passed her baccalaureate and approaching 18, Seyna aspires to only one thing: getting French nationality. But her father Amidou is fiercely opposed to this.
With : Grace Seri, Augustin Ruhabura, Mata Gabin, Ousmane Macalou
Screenplay : Josza Anjembe
Image : Noé Bach
Sound : Martin de Torcy
Editing : Clémence Diard
Music : Jan Visocky
Screenplay : Josza Anjembe
Image : Noé Bach
Sound : Martin de Torcy
Editing : Clémence Diard
Music : Jan Visocky
Production : Yukunkun Productions, Gabriel Festoc, Nelson Ghrénassia
After training in journalism and political sciences, Josza Anjembe worked on various television programmes. Attracted by the stories she heard and fascinated by images, she secretely dreamed of affiring her point of view. In 2008 she decided to get training and direct her first documentary, Massage à la camerounaise, selected for festivals and broadcast on LCP. Le Bleu blanc rouge de mes cheveux is her first fiction.