Madagascar, a journey diary

11 MINUTES

Come on this painterly journey to Madagascar’s ‘turning of the dead’

In the age of the selfie stick, the word ‘tourist’ often comes with negative connotations, summoning images of trinket seekers and amateur smartphone photographers looking to prove they’ve been there, done that. But the drive to travel is, of course, more than consumerism at its worst. To step outside of one’s routines and society can be a thrilling act of cultural exchange and self-discovery. This more immersive vision of travel sits at centre of the Academy Award-nominated animation from the French filmmaker Bastien Dubois, Madagascar, a Journey Diary (2010), which, for most viewers, will represent its own enthralling odyssey to somewhere new.

Born of Dubois’s own time in Madagascar, the short follows his trip to the countryside to witness a sacred tradition known as famadihana, or ‘the turning of the dead’. This ritual of the Malagasy ethnic group involves exhuming the corpse of a loved one, covering them in a fresh shroud, and carrying the body overhead while singing and dancing in celebration and remembrance. Once the viewer is launched on the journey to the famadihana alongside Dubois, the film unfolds like a scrapbook travelogue, with its pages flipping in the wind as the viewer tries to keep pace and absorb the scenes.

With Dubois depicting his travels in everything from stop-motion stitching to flickering watercolours, the work evokes the overwhelming feeling of moving through an unfamiliar place, trying to make sense of the grand cacophony of it all. The effect is far more visceral than cerebral. As Dubois put it in an interview, he was driven by a desire to make the audience feel lost in this whirlwind of images and sounds, rather than aiming to explore ethics or educate. Yet in these carefully observed scenes of Madagascar’s bustling city streets, lush landscapes and inhabitants welcoming an outsider, there’s a sense of the perspective-shifting adventure that travel can offer – of getting far from the tourist attractions, and lost somewhere new in the best possible way.

Written by Adam D’Arpino

Director: Bastien Dubois

Producers: Ron Dyens, Aurélia Prévieu

Explore more

A man lying with a serene expression surrounded by white lilies against a dark background.
AGEING

At 84, Jun lives to shock. His next act? A living funeral no one asked for

A film by Mari Young and Anika Kan Grevstad

Close-up of an elderly woman’s face with eyes closed, light grey hair, and a blurred brown background. Her expression is calm.

Why one death doula sees an examined death as vital to a good life

A film by Annie Marr

Illustration of a blue-colored woman balancing on one leg surrounded by plants, flowers, a crab, berries, mushrooms, and a turtle.
DANCE

Every culture dances. So why did humans evolve to get down?

Directed by Rosanna Wan and Andrew Khosravani

A child’s drawing of a person in front of a red door, playing a pink electric guitar with lightning bolts around them.

Ethan ponders his daughter’s future without him in this celebrated short

Directed by Ethan Barrett

People in traditional costumes and masks dance while musicians play instruments in an outdoor setting.

An ancient ritual is a window to Mayan culture’s deep past and vibrant present

Directed by Ricky Lopez Bruni

Illustration of a coastal landscape with a yellow tower, green hills, and cacti in the foreground, overlooking a calm sea under a blue sky.
TRAVEL

Postcards from a Tuscan island where an unhurried pace is a way of life

Directed by Tom Schroeder

Group of men and a boy dining at an outdoor table in a forest, with various foods and drinks on a lace tablecloth.

Mamuka and his tuneful panduri light up this Georgian village feast

Directed by Bálint Bíró, Diego Quindere de Carvalho and Salome Razikashvili

Hand touching a detailed wooden totem pole carving with traditional painted designs; clear blue sky in the background.

Restored footage reveals how a totem pole raising sparked a cultural rebirth

Directed by Christopher Auchter