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"ONE OF THE BEST FILMS so far this year
at Sundance!
A look at the triumph of the blacks in South Africa over the brutal reign
of apartheid through the subversive power of music. The picture uses the music
of the slain activist and performer Vuyisile Mini, whose songs were so mesmerizing
and lovely that white schoolteachers would insist on having the children sing
them, blind to the protest lodged deep in each song."
Elvis Mitchell, THE NEW YORK TIMES
"Song is what keeps us alive." -- Lindiwe
Zulu (Freedom Fighter)
The power of song to communicate, motivate, console, unite
and, ultimately, beget change: that ideal, gloriously realized, lies at the
heart of director Lee Hirsch's inspiring feature film documentary Amandla! A
Revolution in Four-Part Harmony. Winner of the Audience Award and Freedom of
Expression Award at the 2002 Sundance Film Festival, Amandla! tells the story
of black South African freedom music and reveals the central role it played
in the long battle against apartheid. The first film to specifically consider
the music that sustained and galvanized black South Africans for more than 40
years, Amandla!'s focus is on the struggle's spiritual dimension, as articulated
and embodied in song. It is unlike any other film yet made on the subject of
apartheid, and an electrically expressive portrait of South African life then
and now.
In form as well as content, Amandla! breaks new ground. Beginning with its dynamic
opening title sequence, Amandla! harnesses the visual and sonic power of cinema
to create a powerfully emotional viewing experience. Vivid, color-drenched cinematography
flows like song, complementing an innovative narrative that combines original
footage, breathtaking musical numbers, archive and haunting reenactments to
celebrate the resilience of the human spirit throughout the decades-long struggle
for freedom in South Africa. Nine years in the making, Amandla! was shot in
South Africa and features interviews with a diverse range of individuals, who
candidly share their experiences of struggle and song. The film brings dozens
of freedom songs to the screen, drawing upon original recordings and thrilling,
sometimes impromptu live performances by celebrated South African musicians
and nonprofessionals alike. Threaded throughout the film, these rich and beautiful
anthems take viewers on an extraordinary journey through the spiritual and physical
reality of life under apartheid.
Amandla! unearths the story of an extraordinary unsung hero, composer and activist
Vuyisile Mini. A courageous political leader as well as a gifted songwriter
and poet, Mini quickly realized the expressive potency of song after the apartheid
government came to power in 1948, depriving black South Africans of their most
basic rights as citizens. Mini gave voice and hope to a powerless people with
anthems like 'Beware Verwoerd,' in which an infectious melody carries Xhosa
lyrics that warn the architect of apartheid, Hendrik Verwoerd, that his day
of reckoning will come.
To tell the story of this music, Amandla! turns to the people of South Africa
itself. Among those featured in intimate interviews are the renowned musicians
who helped expose the suffering of black South Africa to the world, including
trumpeter Hugh Masekela, singer Miriam Makeba, pianist Abdullah Ibrahim, singer/songwriter
Vusi Mahlasela and singer Sibongile Khumalo. There are several generations of
South Africans who experienced the struggle on the ground, a group that ranges
from actress/singer Sophie Mgcina to freedom fighter (now Chief Director, West
and Central Africa in the government's Department of Foreign Affairs) Lindiwe
Zulu and activist/music producer Sifiso Ntuli. One of the film's most moving
stories comes from current Parliament member Thandi Modise, who describes her
ordeal as a political prisoner under apartheid. Tortured despite her advanced
pregnancy, Modise was abandoned to her dank cell after her water broke during
a brutal interrogation. On the verge of suicide, she mustered the will to live
and fight on - she began to sing.
In addition to the songs themselves, Amandla! retrieves a stunning bounty of
archive footage, some of it never before seen. Culled from a variety of sources,
the footage describes the brutal arc of apartheid: the forced removals of black
South Africans to wretched, government-built townships; the institution of onerous
pass laws; and the imprisonment of Nelson Mandela. As the white government grew
increasingly repressive and violent in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s, freedom songs
responded, urging the fight on. A new combination of dance and song, the toyi-toyi,
became a potent weapon in taking on the police.
In 1994, the struggle reached its triumphant climax with the election of Nelson
Mandela as South Africa's first democratically chosen president. Amandla! concludes
on a joyously harmonic note with the 'Siyanqoba (Victory)' rally, held in 1995
just prior to the government's first democratic local elections, the final step
in the process of democratic transformation. Yet the story of freedom songs
does not end there; as Amandla! makes clear, the music remains part of the fabric
of the new South Africa. The freedom songs that were the strongest voice of
an oppressed people now serve to express the very soul of their struggle to
a post-apartheid generation. Named for the Xhosa word for 'power,' Amandla!
lives up to its title, telling an uplifting story of human courage, resolve
and triumph.
SOURCE: http://www.filmforum.org/archivedfilms/amandla/amandla.html