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6,5/10
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Micah Mangena est sergent dans la police d'Afrique du Sud et il soutient le pouvoir en place. Il est dans une situation explosive, et il ne le sait même pas. Mais la révolte qui gronde dans ... Tout lireMicah Mangena est sergent dans la police d'Afrique du Sud et il soutient le pouvoir en place. Il est dans une situation explosive, et il ne le sait même pas. Mais la révolte qui gronde dans son pays va radicalement changer sa vie.Micah Mangena est sergent dans la police d'Afrique du Sud et il soutient le pouvoir en place. Il est dans une situation explosive, et il ne le sait même pas. Mais la révolte qui gronde dans son pays va radicalement changer sa vie.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 3 nominations au total
Julie Strijdom
- Lucy Van Tonder
- (as Julie Stridom)
Avis à la une
It is 1980 South Africa. Micah Mangena (Danny Glover) is a black police officer. He is honest and dutiful. He trains the younger black cops. His wife Rosie (Alfre Woodard) is maid in a white household. His son Zweli (Maynard Eziashi) is losing faith in his father as politcal pressure builds and revolts mount. Van Tonder (Marius Weyers) is his friendly white superior officer. As conflicts rise, secret police De Villiers (Malcolm McDowell) leads a brutal crackdown.
Directed by Morgan Freeman, this is a solid film about living under apartheid. Nelson Mandela was released in 1990. An election would be held a year after this movie. In a way, this may have caught the public at the wrong time as the world was looking forward. Nevertheless, this is a well made film with solid performances.
Directed by Morgan Freeman, this is a solid film about living under apartheid. Nelson Mandela was released in 1990. An election would be held a year after this movie. In a way, this may have caught the public at the wrong time as the world was looking forward. Nevertheless, this is a well made film with solid performances.
Morgan Freeman's directorial debut.. superb performance by the protagonist Danny Glover.. horrors of apartheid ... no melodrama or overacting .. an insightful film
In the Apartheid era, Danny Glover is a sargeant in the South African police in a peaceful township. He lectures the cadets, he obeys his orders, he takes care of his wife, Alfre Woodard, and their son, Maynard Eziashi. What he finds out during the course of the film is that Eziashi is a student leader of the anti-Apatheid movement, and that new local police commander Malcolm McDowell thinks that the response to peaceful demonstrations is shotgun shells.
It's Morgan Freeman's sole outing as a feature director, and it's a stellar effort in acting by all on hand, particularly Marius Weyers as the sympathetic cop who's shoved aside -- I always expect Glover, Woodard, and McDowell to give fine performances. It's heartfelt, sad, and ultimately tragic. It was also shot in Zimbabwe.
It's Morgan Freeman's sole outing as a feature director, and it's a stellar effort in acting by all on hand, particularly Marius Weyers as the sympathetic cop who's shoved aside -- I always expect Glover, Woodard, and McDowell to give fine performances. It's heartfelt, sad, and ultimately tragic. It was also shot in Zimbabwe.
Incredible tension from a fevered conflict of races, generations, and police-and-citizens. Morgan Freeman proves himself a great director: the acting from the cast is flawless and strong, and some of the camera set-ups are indelible. There's a short shot where an armored car is roaring toward a phone pole, behind which Alfre Woodward is crouching in terror, that is truly magnificent! Hollywood often ignores superb directorial talent: Charles Laughton only directed one film, Orson Welles had a hell of a time. Yet there are so many mediocre films which lose money! Somebody please jam a good script into Mr. Freeman's hand and stick him behind a camera!
This is an absolute must-see movie for anyone who is interested in the apartheid era in South Africa. The story is seen largely through the eyes of Micah (Danny Glover), a black police sargeant whose job is to keep order in a black township. Micah is proud of his police work. It has fed his family and given them a standard of living higher than anyone else's in the area. It has also made him a traitor in the eyes of his own people, and we see him eventually coming into conflict with the younger generation of blacks in particular, who don't see his job as anything noble. To them he is a "Judas" - betraying his own people. Increasing defiance of the apartheid laws by the young people eventually brings in special forces officers from Pretoria (Malcolm McDowell is excellent in this role) whose ruthless tactics eventually have even Micah questioning his role in enforcing the laws.
Glover was superb in this movie, excellently portraying the confusion building inside Micah as everything he has built his life on up to this point begins to crumble. Alfre Woodard also put on a strong performance as Micah's wife Rosie, who finds herself ostracized from the community because of her husband's job.
The evils of apartheid are clearly shown in this movie, and having seen it, one marvels at the fact that in the end apartheid was so quickly set aside and a modern and democratic South Africa under majority rule was so easily established. Be warned that the South African accents used in the film can be at times a little difficult to follow, but that's a small price to pay for one of the best movies I've seen in a long time.
9/10
Glover was superb in this movie, excellently portraying the confusion building inside Micah as everything he has built his life on up to this point begins to crumble. Alfre Woodard also put on a strong performance as Micah's wife Rosie, who finds herself ostracized from the community because of her husband's job.
The evils of apartheid are clearly shown in this movie, and having seen it, one marvels at the fact that in the end apartheid was so quickly set aside and a modern and democratic South Africa under majority rule was so easily established. Be warned that the South African accents used in the film can be at times a little difficult to follow, but that's a small price to pay for one of the best movies I've seen in a long time.
9/10
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesMorgan Freeman's film-directing debut.
- Bandes originalesPIRI WANGO IYA
Written and Performed by Geoffrey Oryema
Courtesy of Realworld Records, Ltd./Virgin Records America, Inc.
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Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 12 000 000 $US (estimé)
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 212 483 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 88 390 $US
- 26 sept. 1993
- Montant brut mondial
- 212 483 $US
- Durée2 heures
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1
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