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DocumentaryHorror

Africa Addio

- Every Scene Looks You Straight in the Eye... and Spits!

A documentary about the end of the colonial era in Africa, portraying acts of animal poaching, violence, executions, and tribal slaughter.

Release Date : 1966-02-11

Language :Italian

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Cineriz

Production Country : Italy

Alternative Titles : Africa: Blood and Guts

Cast

Sergio Rossi

Character Name : Narrator (voice)

Original Name : Sergio Rossi

Gender : Male

Jomo Kenyatta

Character Name : (archive footage)

Original Name : Jomo Kenyatta

Gender : Male

Gualtiero Jacopetti

Character Name : Himself (uncredited)

Original Name : Gualtiero Jacopetti

Gender : Male

Julius Nyerere

Character Name : Himself (uncredited)

Original Name : Julius Nyerere

Gender : Male

Moïse Kapenda Tshombe

Character Name : Himself (uncredited)

Original Name : Moïse Kapenda Tshombe

Gender : Male

Richard Gordon Turnbull

Character Name : Himself (uncredited)

Original Name : Richard Gordon Turnbull

Gender : Male

Ian Yule

Character Name : Himself (uncredited)

Original Name : Ian Yule

Gender : Male

Reviews

A

adorablepanic

@adorablepanic

2021-06-23

AFRICA ADDIO (1966) is a difficult work to evaluate. Released at a time when most major media resources were focused on the Vietnam War, co-directors Gualtiero Jacopetti and Franco Prosperi were among a very, very small group of people documenting the unrest which accompanied the decolonization of Africa. More than 50 years after its release, this is still a brutally graphic film: human death is captured on camera, up-close and unsimulated; hippopotami and elephants are attacked with spears until they resemble living pin-cushions, only expiring after suffering prolonged and agonizing brutality; human remains litter rural fields and city streets like so much discarded waste. There are several scenes where the audio appears to be altered to present the on-screen activity in a manipulated context, which was a technique employed in both MONDO CANE (1962) and MONDO CANE 2 (1963). Charges that the filmmakers were actually complicit in staging some of the death scenes led to a court case in Italy, where they were eventually acquitted. But being critical of a mondo movie for employing deception is like being critical of a baker for employing yeast; it's one of the tools at the creators' disposal. Understanding that the mondo genre in general was more concerned with titilation and shock than in absolute narrative truth will go a long way in explaining why Jacopetti and Prosperi may have felt the need to alter already potent footage: they weren't aspiring documentarians, but rather talented grindhouse purveyors who found themselves in the right place at the right time.