Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA filmed account of the Zaire 74 soul music festival, originally intended to be in concert with the famous Rumble in the Jungle bout in Kinshasa, Zaire in 1974.A filmed account of the Zaire 74 soul music festival, originally intended to be in concert with the famous Rumble in the Jungle bout in Kinshasa, Zaire in 1974.A filmed account of the Zaire 74 soul music festival, originally intended to be in concert with the famous Rumble in the Jungle bout in Kinshasa, Zaire in 1974.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 1 victoire et 2 nominations au total
Muhammad Ali
- Self
- (images d'archives)
James Brown
- Self
- (images d'archives)
Fania All-Stars
- Themselves - Performers
- (images d'archives)
Ray Barretto
- Self - Performer
- (images d'archives)
Drew Bundini Brown
- Self - Ali's Cameraman
- (images d'archives)
Stokely Carmichael
- Self - Black Nationalist
- (images d'archives)
The Crusaders
- Themselves - Performers
- (images d'archives)
Celia Cruz
- Self
- (images d'archives)
Avis à la une
Did you know that the Rumble in the Jungle, the fight in which Muhammed Ali regained the Heavyweight Boxing Championship from George Foreman, was preceded by a concert which included the likes of B. B. King, James Brown, and Sister Sledge? If I once knew that, it had vanished from my memory.
The rest of the movie is taken up with speeches by Ali -- but not Foreman -- the process of setting up the festival, and interactions with the locals, who are thrilled to be seeing the musicians.
The movie is good, but I need to see if I can find an album that contains more of the music.
This sentence is here to bring this up to minimum IMDb length.
The rest of the movie is taken up with speeches by Ali -- but not Foreman -- the process of setting up the festival, and interactions with the locals, who are thrilled to be seeing the musicians.
The movie is good, but I need to see if I can find an album that contains more of the music.
This sentence is here to bring this up to minimum IMDb length.
It's 1974 Kinshasa, Zaire. Promoters Hugh Masekela and Stewart Levine are organizing a companion music festival for the Ali-Foreman fight. It is to be the combination of African American music and musicians from mother Africa. James Brown is the headliner. A few days before the event, the fight is delayed due to Foreman's eye cut. The problem is that the music festival can not be delayed. The show must go on. This documentary starts like a freight train with James Brown and Soul Power. The main problem stems from the fact that it doesn't follow one person. It's a scattered way to tell a narrative. There is no structure. It's more like a series of behind-the-scenes snippets. There are amazing scenes of the stars talking, and some great musical performances. It's a nice series of vignettes that allows the audience to travel back in time to a specific place.
In 1974, George Foreman and Muhammad Ali had a fight in the jungle in Africa. They also decided to schedule a music festival too six weeks before the actual event. The top performers like Celia Cruz, James Brown, the Spinners, Bill Withers, Sister Sledge and others performed on stage. This documentary covers how they set up the concert. Most people are unaware of this event actually happened except for the actual boxing match. The documentary is a bit uneven at times without a narrator. They all seemed like to have a lot of fun though and it was an adventure of a lifetime.
Jeffrey Levy-Hinte's film 'Soul Power'is a remarkable concert documentary that was filmed in Zaire in 1974,as part of the Muhammad Ali/George Forman fight,known as The Rumble In The Jungle. This was a 12 hour,three night festival of musical talent from various parts of Africa,as well as the United States. The film begins with footage of the preparations for the concert,and the red tape and b.s. that goes along with putting on a concert of grand scale. Once the music begins,it's no holds barred. The musical talent includes,James Brown,The Crusaders,Miriam Makeba,B.B. King,The Fania All Stars (with the late,great Celia Cruz), The Spinners,and a host of others. Interview footage of Muhammad Ali, Don King,and others representing the boxing match also figures as a foot note (for further details,check out Leon Gast's 'Once We Were King',which Levy-Hinte edited),about the actual match itself). The music will have you stomping holes in the floor of the cinema that is screening it. Rated PG-13 by the MPAA,this films contains a rude word or two,and some mature thematic elements
The scene is the setting of the 1974 'Rumble in the Jungle' world heavyweight fight between Muhammad Ali and George Foreman in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The event is Zaire '74, a three day music festival in Kinshasa that featured black artists from both America and Africa. To this end we have a selection of soul, R&B, funk and blues mixed in with popular African music of the day. The event attracted a few big name American artists such as James Brown, Bill Withers, B.B. King, The Spinners and The Crusaders. But what added to the overall feel of the event was that it uniquely allowed for the African-American musicians to not only perform to a whole new appreciative audience but to also return to their spiritual African roots.
The film is sort of unique because of its historical context where a group of film-makers were paid to professionally document everything but financial red tape resulted in the footage remaining unseen for over thirty years. Not only does this give the material an extra interest factor in itself but it has allowed for a new documentary to be made entirely using old unseen footage. Wisely, the editors have decided to only use footage from the time, with no contemporary interviews of participants looking back at events and reminiscing. This achieves two things in that it makes the material seem more urgent and of the time, while also attempting to finish the project that was abandoned over three decades previously by only using the footage actually shot. It documents events from the pre-concert stages through to the finale of the show. The details surrounding the event, like snippets of the locals, interviews with the participants and behind the scenes details make it a very interesting and rounded historical document. The fight itself is marginalised, although we do hear promoter Don King in full flow and Ali is seen several times letting fly with many of his opinions on race-related issues of the day. The music itself perhaps doesn't get as much of a showcase as it might but I think overall by including all of the periphery details the film-makers have captured a time and place even better.
The film is sort of unique because of its historical context where a group of film-makers were paid to professionally document everything but financial red tape resulted in the footage remaining unseen for over thirty years. Not only does this give the material an extra interest factor in itself but it has allowed for a new documentary to be made entirely using old unseen footage. Wisely, the editors have decided to only use footage from the time, with no contemporary interviews of participants looking back at events and reminiscing. This achieves two things in that it makes the material seem more urgent and of the time, while also attempting to finish the project that was abandoned over three decades previously by only using the footage actually shot. It documents events from the pre-concert stages through to the finale of the show. The details surrounding the event, like snippets of the locals, interviews with the participants and behind the scenes details make it a very interesting and rounded historical document. The fight itself is marginalised, although we do hear promoter Don King in full flow and Ali is seen several times letting fly with many of his opinions on race-related issues of the day. The music itself perhaps doesn't get as much of a showcase as it might but I think overall by including all of the periphery details the film-makers have captured a time and place even better.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThis festival was originally intended to complement the famous George Foreman/Mohammad Ali championship boxing match aka "The Rumble in the Jungle." However, shortly before the match, Foreman was injured in training and the bout had to be delayed for him to recuperate. To both avoid further disappointing the locals and in recognition that the performers have outstanding commitments elsewhere after the festival, it was decided to have it proceed on schedule on its own.
- ConnexionsFeatured in When We Were Kings (1996)
- Bandes originalesSoul Power
Written by James Brown
Performed by James Brown & the J.B.'s
Under license from Unichappell Music, Inc.
on behalf of Crited Music, Inc. (BMI)
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Détails
Box-office
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 207 121 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 23 893 $US
- 12 juil. 2009
- Montant brut mondial
- 254 582 $US
- Durée
- 1h 32min(92 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1
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