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Come Back, Africa / produced and directed by Lionel Rogosin.

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Independent World Cinema: Classic and Contemporary Film. Available online

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Format:
Video
Contributor:
Rogosin, Lionel, 1924-2000, director.
Alexander Street Press.
Milestone Film & Video, production company.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Black people--South Africa--Johannesburg--Social conditions.
Black people.
Apartheid--South Africa--Johannesburg.
Apartheid.
Race relations.
Social conditions.
South Africa--Race relations.
South Africa.
South Africa--Johannesburg.
Genre:
Feature films.
Political films.
Video recordings.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (86 minutes)
Other Title:
Come Back Africa
Place of Publication:
[Harrington Park, New Jersey] : Milestone Films, [1959]
Language Note:
In English, Afrikaans, and Zulu; original language in Afrikaans.
System Details:
data file
Summary:
Lionel Rogosin's 1959 powerful classic Come Back, Africa is one of the bravest and best of all political films. After witnessing firsthand the terrors of fascism as a soldier in World War II, Lionel Rogosin vowed to fight against it wherever and whenever he saw it reemerging. In an effort to expose "what people try to avoid seeing," Rogosin traveled to South Africa and secretly filmed Come Back, Africa, which revealed the cruelty and injustice suffered by black and colored peoples under apartheid. Before beginning the production of Come Back, Africa, Rogosin spent several months touring Africa, becoming accustomed to the way of life in South Africa and acquiring a sense of the apartheid government's sensitivity to anti-government "conspiracies" - such as the very film he wished to create. Much of Come Back, Africa was filmed in Sophiatown, a ghetto reserved for blacks and a vibrant center of music, art, literature and politics that has since become legendary. Residents included Desmond Tutu, Nelson Mandela, Father Trevor Huddleston, Hugh Masekela and three of the film's main contributors --author/journalists Bloke Modisane and Can Themba and the already celebrated singer, Miriam Makeba. But even as they filmed, Sophiatown was already in the process of being demolished and its residents forcibly removed. Shortly after production ended, Sophiatown was emptied, razed and rebuilt as a whites-only suburb called Triumf. (Makeba, later known world-wide as "Mamma Africa," helped popularize "Meadowlands," a song against the forced removals, and in 1959 recorded "Sophiatown is Gone.") In making Come Back, Africa, Rogosin's goal was to reveal the harsh injustice of apartheid. In order to make a film that honestly and accurately portrayed the life of people in Sophiatown (as he did with his first film, On the Bowery), the filmmaker spent almost a year meeting with activists and writers, both black and white. Rogosin cast the film before writing the screenplay, basing the story on the experiences of the cast and crew. The final script was little more than a sketch of plot points; the actors created their own dialogue in order to create an authentic representation of their lives.
Participant:
Miriam Makeba, Vinah Makeba, Zachria Makeba, Molly Parkin.
Notes:
Title from resource description page (viewed December 08, 2016).
Won 1959 Venice Film Festival, Pasinetti Award, Parallel Sections
OCLC:
971317380
Access Restriction:
Restricted for use by site license.

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