Divine Carcasse (Divine Body) is a 1998 Beninese ethnofiction film directed by the Belgian filmmaker Dominique Loreau.
[1] Mixing fiction and ethnography, the film follows a 1955 Peugeot: initially owned by Simon, an expatriate European philosophy lecturer, the car comes to be owned by Joseph, who uses it as a taxi until it is abandoned at a mechanic's workshop.
There it is scavenged for parts used by the artist Simonet Biokou to create a sculpture of the ram god Agbo.
[2] The car is caught between commodity fetishism and post-colonial fetish spirituality: Secondhand neocolonialism becomes first-class colonized semideity [...] As a car the Peugeot works fitfully; as a divinity it works superbly.
[1]This article related to a Beninese film is a stub.