Words of Wisdom:

"You judge yourself more harshly than anyone else." - Ytmooxxamygr

Lifting Up an African Hero

  • Date Submitted: 01/28/2010 03:09 AM
  • Flesch-Kincaid Score: 43.6 
  • Words: 391
  • Essay Grade: no grades
  • Report this Essay
    Sometimes the magic of movies gives you an overwhelming amount of emotion by bringing you joy, fear, or sorrow.   Sometimes, movies offer a great old-fashioned learning experience.   For someone who does not know a thing about African politics in the early 1960s, "Lumumba" is a movie that is just dying to explain it all.


    Patrice Lumumba (played by Eriq Ebouaney) was a postal clerk and beer salesman, who represented the Congo (controlled by Belgium) in the Pan-African Conference in Accra.   Following that, the Congo declared independence from Belgium and Lumumba became the country's first Prime Minister.   The position lasted a littel over two months before Belgian troops intervened and Lumumba was dismissed and executed.


    Directed by Raoul Peck and written by Peck and the French screenwriter Pascal Bonitzer, the film struggles to compress the important events in the life of an important man into just two hours.


    "Scene after scene, "Lumubma" is made up of frenzied meetings, latenight paperwork sessions, passionate speeches, and hastily made decisions," said Clark Atlanta University sophomore Tacara Moss. "Each scene moves quickly and is cut together tightly.   In all the intense excitement, we never really get an idea of who Lumumba is," continued Moss.


    Others believe that is helpful, and even necessary, to make such a fast-moving portrait in order to get in all the pertinent details, but it is equally necessary to show a couple of scens of Lumumba simply reflecting, doing nothing, and living.  


    "Lumumba never seems to be affected personally by everything that happens to him," said Clark Atlanta University sophomore Amber Ellis. "He's definitly affected politically and his actions show this, but we never see him thinking about what would have happened if he had remained a beer salesman or if he and his wife had simply moved away and lived a quiet life," Ellis continued.


    Yet, some...

Comments

Express your owns thoughts and ideas on this essay by writing a grade and/or critique.

  1. No comments