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La maîtresse noire

Original title: Slaves
  • 1969
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 50m
IMDb RATING
4.8/10
227
YOUR RATING
La maîtresse noire (1969)
Drama

A Kentucky slave fights for his freedom from cruel overseer whose mistress eventually joins Davis and the other slaves in their revolt.A Kentucky slave fights for his freedom from cruel overseer whose mistress eventually joins Davis and the other slaves in their revolt.A Kentucky slave fights for his freedom from cruel overseer whose mistress eventually joins Davis and the other slaves in their revolt.

  • Director
    • Herbert J. Biberman
  • Writers
    • Herbert J. Biberman
    • John O. Killens
    • Alida Sherman
  • Stars
    • Stephen Boyd
    • Dionne Warwick
    • Ossie Davis
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.8/10
    227
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Herbert J. Biberman
    • Writers
      • Herbert J. Biberman
      • John O. Killens
      • Alida Sherman
    • Stars
      • Stephen Boyd
      • Dionne Warwick
      • Ossie Davis
    • 16User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos10

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    Top cast23

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    Stephen Boyd
    Stephen Boyd
    • MacKay
    Dionne Warwick
    Dionne Warwick
    • Cassy
    Ossie Davis
    Ossie Davis
    • Luke
    Marilyn Clark
    Marilyn Clark
    • Mrs. Bennett
    Gale Sondergaard
    Gale Sondergaard
    • New Orleans lady
    Shepperd Strudwick
    Shepperd Strudwick
    • Mr. Stillwell
    Nancy Coleman
    Nancy Coleman
    • Mrs. Stillwell
    Julius Harris
    Julius Harris
    • Shadrach
    David Huddleston
    David Huddleston
    • Holland
    Eva Jessye
    • Julie
    Robert Kya-Hill
    Robert Kya-Hill
    • Jericho
    Barbara Ann Teer
    • Esther
    James Heath
    • Luther
    Aldine King
    • Emmeline
    Slim Landrum
    Gwendolyn Belle
    Buddy Flowers
    James Burford
    • Director
      • Herbert J. Biberman
    • Writers
      • Herbert J. Biberman
      • John O. Killens
      • Alida Sherman
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews16

    4.8227
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    Featured reviews

    tbcrow-11545

    A side note on the movie "Slaves"

    After reading the commentaries on this movie, one important fact has not been mentioned. This was the first movie made by the director, Herbert Biberman, after having been sentenced to six months in prison for contempt of Congress by the McCarthy hearings in 1950 and blacklisted by the Hollywood studios.
    6KayDrama

    Gave it a 10 despite...

    Despite, or maybe because of the budget, I gave this movie a ten. I am really surprised by the maturity of the subject matter and the fact that it didn't gloss over certain relationships. I am always surprised by movies such as Tomango and a very few others that dealt with the horrors of slavery. While Roots was epic and had the backing of the changing attitudes of the era it was produced within' these earlier films, and the actors who starred in them - both black and white - are to be commended.

    By the way, despite some reviewers here saying it is loosely based on Uncle Tom's Cabin - it's not at all. I can only suppose they came up with that because, like all slaves were - the main character cites that to be a good Christian, you must do as the Bible says and be a good servant to your master. All slaves were endoctrinated and manipulated thusly.
    5Uriah43

    Brutal and Raw

    This film initially takes place in Kentucky with a black slave by the name of "Luke" (Ossie Davis) returning from Ohio where he has just sold several horses for a handsome profit in the service of his owner "Mr. Stillwell" (Shepperd Strudwick). Although Luke is expecting his freedom sometime in the near future, not long afterward he is informed by Mr. Stillwell that, because of financial hardship, he is being sold back on the slave market. Needless to say, this news, along with the fact that he has to leave his wife and children, breaks Luke's heart but, with no choice in the matter, he accepts his fate with great resignation. A few days later, he is sold to a cruel Mississippi plantation owner named "Nathan MacKay" (Stephen Boyd) who, for the sake of his own ego, whips and humiliates the once-valued negotiator out of pride and ignorance. Yet even then, Luke remains steadfast and resolute in his beliefs and this eventually creates a major problem for Nathan and several other people working on the plantation. Now, rather than reveal any more, I will just say that this film certain had its possibilities but it turned out a bit too raw and brutal for my tastes. That not to say, however, that conditions weren't as bad as depicted in this movie. They were much worse in some cases. But the interaction among many of the characters seemed rather odd and somewhat uncharacteristic at the time. At least, that's the way it seemed to me. Be that as it may, although conditions were quite horrible for slaves in the antebellum South, I don't believe this movie was as realistic as it could have been and I have rated it accordingly. Average.
    4bbickley13-921-58664

    Dark

    It's a movie about slavery so on that note the movie already has a grim tone to it. Technically, no one once to see a movie about slavery with a happy tone to it.

    The late great Ozzie Davis plays a house slave brainwashed by the master who used the love of Jesus to do so. Ozzie eventually sees the light when his master, who promised he would never sell his slaves, sells him to a new master who sees his slaves as nothing but property, and as such makes the old slave how much slavery sucks.

    Donne Warwick plays another type of House slave that catches the masters attention, if you get my drift, and she somewhat caught in-between being better than the rest of the slaves, but at the same time no different than them.

    The movies best point is that is shows you the different types of mind sets slaves had back in the day. From slaves who want to be free to those who actually think things are find the way they are.

    It's no 12 years a slave, but it paints just as Grim of a tale without the happy ending.
    jwpeel-1

    Listen to the music Forget the film.

    Nothing can be said about this being a great film. It isn't. The acting is amateurish and the story is pure melodrama that reeks of the staleness of another time in casting when broad caricature was passed off as great emoting. But the music is pure Bobby Scott, a jazz stylist with great command of a music form. Bobby was proud of his accomplishments as a songwriter and composer, and this one was no exception. He loved the fact that he got this one away from Burt Bacharach despite that it was done for that songwriter's golden goose, Dionne Warwick. So forget the hoky acting and plot. Listen to the sounds of the great Bobby Scott. (I should also mention that both the director/screenwriter Biberman and actress Gale Sondergard, were blacklisted talents so that at least makes this film noteworthy.) Okay so maybe it is historic in that it marks the acting debut of singer Dionne Warwick, but so what? She was no better than Gladys Knight as a thespian, and believe me, that is no compliment. Like I said. Watch the cinematography and listen to the music on the soundtrack and if you do anything else, don't say I didn't warn you.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      This was the final film directed by Herbert J. Biberman before his death on June 30, 1971 at the age of 71.
    • Quotes

      MacKay: [in a room filled with African artifacts, he is addressing owners and attendant servants] We'd better all understand this darkie we own, gentlemen. He's the only self-reproducing machine in the world. Gotta know how to run it. I first met him in Africa, as a young man, when I ran a ship in the illegal slave-running trade, before I settled down here in the very legal, slave-driving, cotton trade.

      MacKay: [to the servants] Boys, attend to the gentlemen.

      MacKay: [he continues] I packed blacks into my ship until you couldn't walk the decks. Every morning we threw the dead and the rebellious overboard. They were not easy those voyages. But we could turn a profit if we got 40% of them here alive.

      MacKay: [he continues] My library is always at your disposal. Volumes on all the aspects of human slavery. But I can spell it for you in this one, magnificent sculpture or in one story which tells all one needs to know about the human being, in slavery or out. In the African trade, I met an old chief. I bought many of his people from him. Discussing handling slaves, he said "Captain, in the soul of a free man, a little slavery and a lot weigh the same. So they do in the soul of a slave. So when you chain him, just as well chain him firm." Brilliant man! He was as black as coal. He'd find your views, Mr. Bennett, romantic; dangerous.

      MacKay: [he continues] I know you all wonder why I keep these things in my house. They make you uncomfortable. Me too. That's why I keep them here. Ivory, stone, wood, bronze.

      MacKay: [to Luke] Don't gawk, boy. Get that tray filled. Boy! Did you hear me?

      Luke: Yes, Master.

      MacKay: Don't talk back to me. Replenish the tray.

      MacKay: [he continues] I just ordered a darkie out of this room. Do you know anything about him? From his facial characteristics, his people probably came from the Songhai tribe, the area around Timbuktu. Three hundred years ago, they had a university there where the most delicate operations were performed for cataracts of the eye. People came from all over the world to have their sight restored by these extraordinary, black surgeons. I believe origins can crop up even after ten generations - unless they get weeded out. What do we create? Surgeons? Sculptors? Or niggers?

    • Connections
      Featured in Afro Promo (1997)
    • Soundtracks
      Slaves
      Music by Bobby Scott

      Lyrics by Bob Kessler

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    FAQ

    • How long is Slaves?
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    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 25, 1972 (Hungary)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Esclaves
    • Filming locations
      • Buena Vista Plantation, Shreveport, Louisiana, USA
    • Production companies
      • Slaves Company
      • Theatre Guild
      • Walter Reade Organization
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 50 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Mono

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