IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,1/10
1523
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Nachkommen versklavter Afrikaner*innen, die 1860 illegal auf einem Schiff in Alabama eintrafen, hoffen nach dem Fund des Wracks auf Gerechtigkeit und inneren Frieden.Nachkommen versklavter Afrikaner*innen, die 1860 illegal auf einem Schiff in Alabama eintrafen, hoffen nach dem Fund des Wracks auf Gerechtigkeit und inneren Frieden.Nachkommen versklavter Afrikaner*innen, die 1860 illegal auf einem Schiff in Alabama eintrafen, hoffen nach dem Fund des Wracks auf Gerechtigkeit und inneren Frieden.
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Interviewing a bunch of relatives of slaves who just want reparation's for something their great great great grandparents went through. People they never met nor spoke to. Sad that the memory of the people who went through slavery has been reduced to this. The slaves remained strong through humility. They had Christ in their lives and God delivered a people who put their faith in Him. To try to capitalize on a situation like this by making a documentary based on the telephone game mentality of people who honestly are so far removed from the situation any testimony given will be self centric in nature is appalling. Should you ask Caucasian Americans with Italian decent about the roman empire? I think not.
I found this to be a fascinating documentary, that held my attention throughout.
That said, it left me with some unanswered questions, in part because of its format, which focused on interviews with people who lived in Africatown, near where the Clotilda, evidently the last slave ship to arrive in the United States, landed.
I can completely understand why the director and producer would want to give these people a chance to express their views and feelings. They had been ignored for so long.
And I know that documentaries can only be so long before viewers start to turn out and off.
But I would have liked more background about a variety of issues. Do we know anything about the Clotilda's route to the States? Do we know where in Africa it left from? Have any of the descendants taken DNA tests that would help with this?
What was life like for the descendants of the original slaves between the time of Emancipation and today?
And on and on.
None of that is a criticism of the movie, which I enjoyed very much. But because the story it told is so interesting, it left me wanting to know so much more.
That said, it left me with some unanswered questions, in part because of its format, which focused on interviews with people who lived in Africatown, near where the Clotilda, evidently the last slave ship to arrive in the United States, landed.
I can completely understand why the director and producer would want to give these people a chance to express their views and feelings. They had been ignored for so long.
And I know that documentaries can only be so long before viewers start to turn out and off.
But I would have liked more background about a variety of issues. Do we know anything about the Clotilda's route to the States? Do we know where in Africa it left from? Have any of the descendants taken DNA tests that would help with this?
What was life like for the descendants of the original slaves between the time of Emancipation and today?
And on and on.
None of that is a criticism of the movie, which I enjoyed very much. But because the story it told is so interesting, it left me wanting to know so much more.
Slavery was one of the most important, and most disgraceful, parts of US history. Most of the focus on it emphasizes the plantations, the whipping of the enslaved African-Americans, and the Underground Railroad. A lesser known part is the slave trade itself. Outlawed in 1808, it continued in secret. The last ship to bring kidnapped Africans to the United States was the Clotilda, which docked in Mobile, Alabama, before getting sunk to hide its violation of the ban on slave-trading.
Margaret Brown's "Descendant" focuses on this, as well as the descendants of the enslaved people on the Alabama coast. It's a fascinating look at the aftermath of slavery, and how the descendants of the slaveowners are the biggest landholders in the area. Not to mention the chemical refineries dumping all sorts of toxins.
This is not a documentary that you'll forget anytime soon. I recommend it.
Margaret Brown's "Descendant" focuses on this, as well as the descendants of the enslaved people on the Alabama coast. It's a fascinating look at the aftermath of slavery, and how the descendants of the slaveowners are the biggest landholders in the area. Not to mention the chemical refineries dumping all sorts of toxins.
This is not a documentary that you'll forget anytime soon. I recommend it.
The polluting factories and the highway that destroyed the Downtown area of Africatown are just other facts that help validate what the descendants are saying. Historians use oral histories as part of their research - this is a common practice. A lot of people don't want you to see this documentary. They are afraid of how it will make them look. They are afraid that it will explain someone's situation. This is one of the reasons I watched the documentary. It explains so much about the Bible Belt south. If you care about American history at all, you will find this documentary rewarding. Watch it and decide for yourself.
Hollywood fan of history and true events movies. This is for you dear. It elaborates the most tragic event in the history of United States of America, despite of being war with the Latin Americans (Red Indians) there is also a painful history of black Africans who were brought from Africa forcefully into the strange lands of America and become the slaves of white people. Most of them were also killed and separated from their families and even the children of africans faced these traumatic events at that time. After that a long struggle was started which gives them a little bit freedom but there are still lives who are waiting for justice.
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What was the official certification given to Die Nachkommen des Sklavenschiffs Clotilda (2022) in Brazil?
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