Rainhas Africanas: Nzinga
Título original: African Queens: Njinga
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
3,1/10
2,7 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Com produção executiva e narração de Jada Pinkett Smith, esta série documental sobre a rainha guerreira angolana Jinga traz entrevistas com especialistas e dramatizações.Com produção executiva e narração de Jada Pinkett Smith, esta série documental sobre a rainha guerreira angolana Jinga traz entrevistas com especialistas e dramatizações.Com produção executiva e narração de Jada Pinkett Smith, esta série documental sobre a rainha guerreira angolana Jinga traz entrevistas com especialistas e dramatizações.
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I am an American Black woman and can only say that I would be sad if series like these stopped. I am always a second away from unsubscribing from Netflix, but these series (Queen Njinga & Cleopatra), Queen Charlotte, and Bridgerton are what keep me here. I wouldn't dare say what is or isn't accurate for countless reasons... I will say that these type of series awaken curiosity... and often the reason they inflate the impact of the character in these shows and movies is because there is a need to counteract the unbelievable negative brainwashing and imagery we've been exposed to since... the beginning of American history. I'm so glad that everyone is speaking freely about how they feel about these shows... mainly because I'm so glad these type of shows exist.
To all the posters on here that are criticizing with their double standards about the Portuguese not being the first to practice slavery on Africa and that Africans practiced slavery on their own. It's not possible to relativize the one with the other. Get off your high horse people!
Victim blaming serves to create psychological distance between the blamer and it occurs when the victim of a crime or any wrongful act is held entirely or partially at fault for the harm that befell them. The victim blaming serves no one. There is no justification or excuse.
Slavery, forced labor and human trafficking are violations of human rights because these acts strip human beings of their inherent rights. Period!
Victim blaming serves to create psychological distance between the blamer and it occurs when the victim of a crime or any wrongful act is held entirely or partially at fault for the harm that befell them. The victim blaming serves no one. There is no justification or excuse.
Slavery, forced labor and human trafficking are violations of human rights because these acts strip human beings of their inherent rights. Period!
Yeah, the fact is stay away this need to be a child's book or so. She or Jada Smith is way too delusional. She thinks that her view of the truth is. That's what Grandma tells her. I am done with this woke nonsense. I cancel Netflix and go to another platform. End of that.
Yes, you get everything you want from this Document. The truth is the answer you are looking for. And many more. Sure you now know that sarcasm is a real thing.
This is what i have to say and iam shame that iam living in those times here to defend my own race. Shame.
- Nonsense Document
- Delusional Facts
- Gender swaps
- Race swaps
- Woke promotions
Yes, you get everything you want from this Document. The truth is the answer you are looking for. And many more. Sure you now know that sarcasm is a real thing.
This is what i have to say and iam shame that iam living in those times here to defend my own race. Shame.
... it manages to be remarkably superficial - there's a distinct lack of detail, of character, of personality, of context, & analysis.
The poor-quality dramatic sequences also do nothing for the supposed exploration of this figure, her culture, & her times.
Everyone is shallowly sketched, & details are glossed over with great regularity
It's astonishing that Ms Pinkett-Smith gave this first entry 5 parts- & yet the very format has limited the ability to go deeply into the subject...
The drama & scope is limited, cliche, & trite- I found myself more drawn to books on the subject - where the character of Nzinga, her spirit, & sense of self comes far more alive, ironically, than in this live action docu-drama...
The poor-quality dramatic sequences also do nothing for the supposed exploration of this figure, her culture, & her times.
Everyone is shallowly sketched, & details are glossed over with great regularity
It's astonishing that Ms Pinkett-Smith gave this first entry 5 parts- & yet the very format has limited the ability to go deeply into the subject...
The drama & scope is limited, cliche, & trite- I found myself more drawn to books on the subject - where the character of Nzinga, her spirit, & sense of self comes far more alive, ironically, than in this live action docu-drama...
As native Angolan, I have to criticize this western revisionist "documentary".
1- The actors aren't native, the languages also aren't. They hired a British-Nigerian... it's not even a native Nigerian. And even if it was, Nigerians and Angolans aren't the same just because we share higher amounts of melanin. We have different cultures, languages, and even physical traits. Our histories also diverge.
( nothing against Yorubas and Igbo people, much respect for their history and cultures, but I believe they wouldn't like someone from a different culture to portray their own history on TV ).
2- Many names and important Kingdoms were ignored to promote an inaccurate story, as well for many historical facts omitted for western narratives... again.
Angolan stories should be about Angolan truths and reality from that period, not western revisionism and ignorance.
It's just disrespectful and insulting.
It might be a good initiative to focus more on African stories, but at least, the very least, is to do a good job, specially when we are talking about national heroes, nationality and culture, you have the obligation to do it right and the most respectful way possible.
It doesn't matter who is behind all of this, the fame and money they have in America, you should just respect our cultures and stories.
Maybe it's time for western people to stop putting Africans in generic skin color boxes... our realities are different; first we see ethnic groups, languages and nationality, and only after we look at skin colour and only if necessary.
1- The actors aren't native, the languages also aren't. They hired a British-Nigerian... it's not even a native Nigerian. And even if it was, Nigerians and Angolans aren't the same just because we share higher amounts of melanin. We have different cultures, languages, and even physical traits. Our histories also diverge.
( nothing against Yorubas and Igbo people, much respect for their history and cultures, but I believe they wouldn't like someone from a different culture to portray their own history on TV ).
2- Many names and important Kingdoms were ignored to promote an inaccurate story, as well for many historical facts omitted for western narratives... again.
Angolan stories should be about Angolan truths and reality from that period, not western revisionism and ignorance.
It's just disrespectful and insulting.
It might be a good initiative to focus more on African stories, but at least, the very least, is to do a good job, specially when we are talking about national heroes, nationality and culture, you have the obligation to do it right and the most respectful way possible.
It doesn't matter who is behind all of this, the fame and money they have in America, you should just respect our cultures and stories.
Maybe it's time for western people to stop putting Africans in generic skin color boxes... our realities are different; first we see ethnic groups, languages and nationality, and only after we look at skin colour and only if necessary.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThis series became the source of controversy in Egypt over its depiction of Queen Cleopatra's ethnicity. The filmmakers asserted the choice regardless.
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- African Queens: Njinga
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- Tempo de duração45 minutos
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- 16:9 HD
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