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Der letzte König von Schottland - In den Fängen der Macht

Originaltitel: The Last King of Scotland
  • 2006
  • 16
  • 2 Std. 3 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,6/10
202.651
IHRE BEWERTUNG
BELIEBTHEIT
3.086
278
Forest Whitaker, James McAvoy, and Kerry Washington in Der letzte König von Schottland - In den Fängen der Macht (2006)
Home Video Trailer from Fox Searchlight Pictures
trailer wiedergeben0:13
21 Videos
46 Fotos
Historisches EposPolitisches DramaBiographieDramaGeschichteThriller

Basierend auf den Ereignissen des brutalen ugandischen Diktators Idi Amin Regime, wie es sein Leibarzt in den 1970er Jahren gesehen hat.Basierend auf den Ereignissen des brutalen ugandischen Diktators Idi Amin Regime, wie es sein Leibarzt in den 1970er Jahren gesehen hat.Basierend auf den Ereignissen des brutalen ugandischen Diktators Idi Amin Regime, wie es sein Leibarzt in den 1970er Jahren gesehen hat.

  • Regie
    • Kevin Macdonald
  • Drehbuch
    • Peter Morgan
    • Jeremy Brock
    • Giles Foden
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • James McAvoy
    • Forest Whitaker
    • Gillian Anderson
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,6/10
    202.651
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    BELIEBTHEIT
    3.086
    278
    • Regie
      • Kevin Macdonald
    • Drehbuch
      • Peter Morgan
      • Jeremy Brock
      • Giles Foden
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • James McAvoy
      • Forest Whitaker
      • Gillian Anderson
    • 413Benutzerrezensionen
    • 204Kritische Rezensionen
    • 74Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • 1 Oscar gewonnen
      • 49 Gewinne & 32 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos21

    The Last King of Scotland
    Trailer 0:13
    The Last King of Scotland
    The Last King of Scotland
    Trailer 0:15
    The Last King of Scotland
    The Last King of Scotland
    Trailer 0:15
    The Last King of Scotland
    The Last King of Scotland
    Trailer 0:13
    The Last King of Scotland
    The Last King of Scotland
    Trailer 2:22
    The Last King of Scotland
    The Last King of Scotland
    Clip 1:12
    The Last King of Scotland
    The Last King of Scotland
    Clip 0:56
    The Last King of Scotland

    Fotos46

    Poster ansehen
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    + 40
    Poster ansehen

    Topbesetzung45

    Ändern
    James McAvoy
    James McAvoy
    • Dr. Nicholas Garrigan
    Forest Whitaker
    Forest Whitaker
    • Idi Amin
    Gillian Anderson
    Gillian Anderson
    • Sarah Merrit
    Kerry Washington
    Kerry Washington
    • Kay Amin
    Simon McBurney
    Simon McBurney
    • Stone
    David Oyelowo
    David Oyelowo
    • Dr. Junju
    Stephen Rwangyezi
    • Jonah Wasswa
    Abby Mukiibi Nkaaga
    • Masanga
    • (as Abby Mukiibi)
    Adam Kotz
    Adam Kotz
    • Dr. Merrit
    Sam Okelo
    • Bonny
    Sarah Nagayi
    • Tolu
    Chris Wilson
    • Perkins
    Dick Stockley
    • Times Journalist
    • (as Dr. Dick Stockley)
    Barbara Rafferty
    • Mrs. Garrigan
    David Ashton
    • Dr. Garrigan - Senior
    Daniel Ssettaba
    • Kay Amin's Servant
    Apollo Okwenje Omamo
    • Mackenzie Amin
    Louis Asea
    • Campbell Amin
    • Regie
      • Kevin Macdonald
    • Drehbuch
      • Peter Morgan
      • Jeremy Brock
      • Giles Foden
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen413

    7,6202.6K
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    8PCC0921

    Forest Whitaker was born on July 15th, 1961

    It is important to learn and understand history. This is evident, not only, with good history, but with bad history as well. Even though you really shouldn't rely on a movie for historical accuracy, at least a film reminds you about that moment, hopefully prompting you to look into it more. This is the story about the Ugandan President, Idi Amin, who rose to power in the 1970s. Idi Amin, became President of Uganda on January 25th, 1971. He is played brilliantly by Forest Whitaker. James McAvoy is cast a fictional character that becomes Amin's private physician. This film is based on a 1998 novel, by the same name, written by Giles Foden. McAvoy's character was based on real associates of Amin, but was fictionalized to further the impact of this story as a biopic film. Foden used information from different associates, research and a combination of fiction and true history. This is a normal story-telling device in film, that is seen in many film biopics.

    McAvoy (Dr. Nicholas Garrigan), is a ladies man, who just graduated from medical school and for some odd reason he picks Uganda as the place where he wants to start his practice. One day, he is summoned to help Amin after a car accident. Amin immediately takes a liking to Nicholas and asks him to be his private physician and advisor. What Nicholas doesn't foresee is a future where Amin goes nuts. If you look back in history, Amin, amid all the media and chaos, was depicted as a madman. Forest Whitaker explores this scenario quite well. He shows you a lighter side of Amin, but also has the great acting skills to show you Amin's dark paranoid side. Once the film really takes off, you begin to understand how weird Amin really was. It reminds you, that it was a good thing his reign came to an end.

    I also want to bring in a comparison. If you have seen Seth Rogan and James Franco's, The Interview (2014), before you have seen Last King of Scotland (2006), or vice-verse, enjoy this comparison, because it only enhances the excellent work, that McAvoy and Whitaker did in this film. In The Interview (2014), James Franco's character becomes best-buddies with North Korean dictator Kim Jong-Un. Of course, all of this is fictional, as well as, a comedy. It has the ridiculous scenario of these two guys being good buddies, either through ignorance or craziness. Well, as you watch Franco and Randall Park (President Kim), interact in their film, think of McAvoy and Whitaker in this film, a serious film, but the results are almost, dead-on, the same. It further enhances the craziness and paranoia of Amin's character and shows, either through ignorance, stupidity or just bad luck that Dr. Nicholas got involved with this nut in the first place. None of this is more evident than at the very end, during the end credits, when director Kevin Macdonald, decides to flash up real footage of Idi Amin. He shows us the real Idi Amin's eyes and face, which solidifies the truth about how really nuts this guy was. It's all in the eyes. You need to see this film.

    8.1 (B MyGrade) = 8 IMDB.
    bob the moo

    The use of Garrigan is a strength and weakness but it is a good film thanks mainly to a terrific turn from Whitaker

    The newly qualified Dr Nicholas Garrigan travels to Uganda to take up a post with a village mission. He arrives just after a coup puts Idi Amin in power of the country. During a visit by Amim to the village, Garrigan captures the President's attention by tending to a small injury to his hand and showing himself decisive and strong-willed. It is not long before the young Garrigan finds himself appointed as physician to the President and ensconced as one of his "closest advisors". However the initial charm shown by Amin gives way to a darker violent streak as Garrigan finds the superficial stability of the country and its leader is nothing of the sort.

    Famous now for the performance that will deservedly win an Oscar in a few weeks time, this film actually doesn't have Amin as the "main" character despite him being the draw and the title character. Instead we actually spend a lot of time with Garrigan, his experiences and his problems. Of course I understand why this was the way because Garrigan is out narrative device – a composite character who acts as our way into the inner circle of Amin and allows the audience to experience him as outsiders as well. This works well in doing this but it does also introduce problems, or at least one problem. This is the fact that, as the story goes on, we find ourselves more and more focused on Garrigan (who doesn't actually exist) rather than Amin or Uganda (who did and does exist respectively). I found this a bit irritating as it got worse because I had come to the film for Amin – as, I suspect, many will have done.

    Even with this though the film still works well and makes for an engaging piece. Macdonald's direction is good and his moving camera does give it the air of a documentary while still very much being a drama. Of course the thing that makes the film work is the central performance from Whitaker. The character of Amin allows him to play to his strengths and he delivers a convincingly unhinged turn, constantly menacing but also managing to have a child-like sense of fun at times and a terrifying tendency towards ruthlessness and violence. I have said before, he was brilliant in The Shield (making the whole season his own) and he is equally brilliant here. Alongside this it is no surprise that McAvoy is a bit weak by comparison. His character is not so convincing (a side effect of being a composite) and some of the narrative turns ask a lot of him – he is still good and it is not his fault that he is in Whitaker's shadow. Washington has a small role but was pretty good in it even if her presence made me wonder why they felt they had to cast an American actress, likewise Anderson but I assume that they helped get funding so fair enough. McBurney is a bit too slimy and sinister and I wasn't sure what the film was trying to say. Audiences may also recognise Oyelowo from his recent high-profile roles in HBO's Five Days and BBC's controversial Shoot The Messenger.

    Overall then not a perfect film but a pretty good one. The use of Garrigan is good at getting us into the story but it is a weakness that we stick with him as the focus. The performances are roundly good but of course it is another terrific turn from Whitaker that makes every scene he is in worth seeing.
    CalRhys

    A Taut Political Thriller

    Gripping, brutal and powerful, 'The Last King of Scotland' is a brilliant dramatic depiction of the life of megalomaniac Ugandan dictator, Idi Amin, perfectly portrayed by Forest Whitaker in his Oscar-winning performance as one of the greatest casting against type roles seen in film. His Amin is capricious and unpredictable, a personality that can seem volcanic one moment and vulnerable a few minutes later. A blunt and brutal tale, and one that is highly engaging from start to finish. A taut political thriller about power and corruption. Macdonald's riveting and incandescent direction caps this fictionalised drama, a truly stunning flick that remains as a highlight of film in 2006.
    8EUyeshima

    Whitaker's Towering Portrayal of the Mesmerizing Ugandan Dictator Lifts This Historical Fiction

    Forest Whitaker's ferociously charismatic turn as Idi Amin so dominates this intense historical fiction that it is honestly difficult to pay attention to anything else in this 2006 political thriller. Even though he is definitively the emotional locus, he is intriguingly not the protagonist of the story. That role belongs to young James McAvoy, who plays Nicholas Garrigan, a precocious Scottish doctor who ventures to Uganda to satisfy his need for adventure after graduating medical school. By happenstance, Garrigan is called upon to help Amin with a minor sprain after his private car plows into a cow. Impressed by the young man's lack of hesitancy to take action, Amin appoints Garrigan to be his personal physician, a post that seduces the impressed doctor into the Ugandan dictator's political inner circle and extravagant lifestyle.

    Scottish director Kevin MacDonald brings his extensive documentary film-making skills to the fore here, as he creates a most realistic-feeling atmosphere in capturing the oppressive Uganda of the 1970's. Helping considerably with this image are the vibrant color contrasts in Anthony Dod Mantle's cinematography and the propulsive action induced by Justine Wright's sharp editing. Screenwriters Peter Morgan (who also wrote "The Queen") and Jeremy Brock have developed a sharply delineated character study of Amin, who evolves from a magnetic leader giving hope to his people to a scarifying tyrant conducting murders on an imaginable scale (at least until the genocides in Rwanda and Darfur). It is impossible to over-praise Whitaker's towering performance here. He conveys the dictator's playfulness as well as his unmitigated rage moving from simmering to full boil with a power that is at once bravura and subtle. His relationship with the fictionalized Garrigan turns out to be the plot's essential pivot point, although the contrast between the two can be almost too extreme at times.

    While McAvoy admirably captures the boyish naiveté of Garrigan, the character is drawn out in rather broad strokes that make his self-delusion all the more contrived as the story progresses. To intensify the political upheaval portrayed, the plot takes a melodramatic turn into an adulterous affair and even folds in the infamous 1976 Entebbe hijacking incident to illustrate Garrigan's increasingly precarious situation. It's all exciting and even downright brutalizing toward the end, but it also starts to feel a bit too Hollywood in execution. Kerry Washington shows genuine versatility as Amin's cloistered third wife Kay, while Simon McBurney oozes cynical suspicion with ease as a British operative. A convincingly Brit-accented Gillian Anderson makes her few scenes count as a weary clinic worker who proves to have better instincts than Garrigan. But see the movie for Whitaker's magnificent work. He is that good.
    9justgazin

    Basically this is excellent historical fiction about the torturous Idi Amin

    There have been so few pictures this year that are standouts. This movie is one of them. Much of what you will see is true, and did occur in Uganda's history. Amin's doctor, played by James Macavoy, is the main fiction in the movie, but one would think they are watching a historical event. Macavoy's character is so real. The doctor grows from a free thinking, adventure loving, womanizer, to a scared, concerned, and enlightened person. The viewer watches through Macavoys eyes as he witnesses the horrors of Amin's (Forest Whitaker's) presidency and regime.

    Forest Whitaker, IS Amin in this feature. Whitaker is not the silent sometimes brooding character you remember in other films he has been in. His accent,his face, and his emotions seem to no longer be Whitaker's but Amin's. This movie will scare the viewer because of its realism, and how it builds up to a tension that is hard to endure. The visuals are not for the squeamish. Go ahead and hide your eyes during the "tough" scenes. It is still worth seeing this movie for the fast paced story, realistic drama, fascinating tale, and for the unbelievable acting. By the end of the movie the audience is exhausted, but satisfied that they saw a worthy flick.

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    Verwandte Interessen

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    Historisches Epos
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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      On the DVD director's commentary, Kevin Macdonald states that during filming of Idi Amin's visit to the village near the mission, many of the local extras thought it was the real Idi Amin on stage giving speeches.
    • Patzer
      Most shots of Entebbe Airport include a long line of African flags running alongside the terminal, between it and the runway. The line includes the flag of the rebel Republic of Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), which neither Uganda, nor any other country, recognized.
    • Zitate

      Idi Amin: You are British?

      Nicholas Garrigan: Scottish. I am Scottish.

      Idi Amin: Scottish? Ha! Ha! Why didn't you say so?... Great soldiers. Very brave. And good people. Completely. Let me tell you, if I could be anything instead of a Ugandan, I would be a Scot.

      Nicholas Garrigan: Right... Really?

      Idi Amin: He. Except for the red hair, which I'm sure is attractive to your women, but which we Africans, we find is quite disgusting.

    • Verbindungen
      Edited from General Idi Amin (1974)
    • Soundtracks
      Nakawunde
      Performed by Percussion Discussion Afrika

      Written by Mike Musoke and Herman Sewanyana

      Copyright Control

      Licensed courtesy of Percussion Discussion Afrika

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    FAQ21

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    • Why is the movie called The Last King of Scotland, if he's the dictator of Uganda?

    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 15. März 2007 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsländer
      • Vereinigtes Königreich
      • Deutschland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprachen
      • Englisch
      • Französisch
      • Deutsch
      • Swahili
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Der letzte König von Schottland
    • Drehorte
      • Kampala, Uganda
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Fox Searchlight Pictures
      • DNA Films
      • FilmFour
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

    Ändern
    • Budget
      • 6.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 17.606.684 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 142.899 $
      • 1. Okt. 2006
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 55.758.874 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      • 2 Std. 3 Min.(123 min)
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 2.35 : 1

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