Roy is a handsome Surinam man, who studies in Amsterdam. He hurriedly left his Dutch girlfriend Karina to visit his dying mom in Paramaribo. Back in his homeland, Roy soon becomes obsessed w... Read allRoy is a handsome Surinam man, who studies in Amsterdam. He hurriedly left his Dutch girlfriend Karina to visit his dying mom in Paramaribo. Back in his homeland, Roy soon becomes obsessed with his own country and its culture. When he falls for the Hindu nurse Rubia, the conserva... Read allRoy is a handsome Surinam man, who studies in Amsterdam. He hurriedly left his Dutch girlfriend Karina to visit his dying mom in Paramaribo. Back in his homeland, Roy soon becomes obsessed with his own country and its culture. When he falls for the Hindu nurse Rubia, the conservative Hindu and Black communities are in revolt. One day Karina arrives in Surinam too.
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A second viewing reveals some nice details. For instance, in the beginning of the movie, Breeveld's character takes a cab from the airport to the city. The cab driver is Hindustani and Indian music sounds through his radio. Later on, in the montage where Breeveld enjoys a walk through his home town (great music by Lieve Hugo) we see shots of a Hindu mandir (temple) and a Bollywood movie poster. The director has introduced the presence of Indian culture throughout Surinamese society, as a non-dominant but all-permeating influence. This sets up the tensions that follow nicely.
The movie has a great soundtrack of nostalgic Surinamese music and some great shots of Suriname's interior! The shots of Willeke van Ammelrooy in the guest house with the shadows of the blinds across her nightgown look suspiciously like the famous shots of Kim Basinger in 9 1/2 Weeks (made some ten years later).
Great acting by the supporting characters like the fathers of the boy and the girl, and Ruud Mungroo as Breeveld's character's friend, a quintessential hustler.
The movie was made in 1974 but has aged well, especially in it's critique of Surinamese society.
This is one of the movies made in the seventies by director Pim de la Parra and producer Wim Verstappen, also known as "Pim and Wim". Director of photography Marc Felperlaan went on to do most of Dick Maas's films. If i'm correct you can also spot Theo van de Sande on the credits, as a second unit dp or something. He went on to shoot stuff like "Blade" in the States.
The movie created an ugly backlash after it's initial release, with Hindustani's condemning Diana Gangaram Panday's performance, resulting in harassment and stuff like that.
Coming from India, I have seen so many films with the same theme, 90% of them are over-dramatized and very few have succeeded in getting it right in portraying the conflicts rooted with local sensibilities. With One People (1976), Pim de la Parra for the most part accurately depicts the emotions running wild between Creole and Hindu culture with Suriname serving as the backdrop.
The movie is set a year after Suriname's independence in 1975. It revolves around Roy, a young black Surinamese studying economics in Amsterdam. When he gets a telegram that his mother is dying, his Dutch girlfriend Karina lends him money for a plane ticket. After 5 years, he sets foot in Suriname and offers his last respect to his mother. He starts an affair with a Hindu nurse Rubia and meets her daily just few days after the passing of his mom. However, unforeseen events pile up, punctuated by religious differences that causes rift in the family. Now, Roy is asked to end the relationship, and with neither his family nor Rubia accepting their relationship due to differences in religion, they elope. The drama intensifies when Karina comes over to pick up Roy. The rest of the movie deals with Roy's inner conflicts, his understanding of an independent homeland and mainly his turbulent relationship with his father, who acts on moral principles with the appearance of a Christian life. Finally, how Roy manages to survive the situation fuelled by socio-economic difference in the city and finding his true home.
I'm glad that Pim de la Parra didn't attempt the role of Romeo and Juliet and do a big shift, moral policing or ask the characters to give sermons on societal reforms with cliched narratives just like they do in most of the popular Indian films. One of the most wonderful things about 'One People' is how things unfold at leisurely pace. Would recommend this movie to the fans of Atif Yilmaz, Jorge Furtado, Férid Boughedir, Yilmaz Güney, Selma Baccar, Ali Özgentürk, Nouri Bouzid, Moufida Tlatli, Abdellatif Ben Ammar and French New Wave lovers.
Did you know
- TriviaThis is the first feature film from Suriname.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Twee voor twaalf: Episode dated 25 March 2022 (2022)
Details
- Runtime1 hour 51 minutes
- Sound mix