Amistad (1997)
Is it possible to say anything less than adulatory about this generation's Roots without looking like the kind of creep who failed to weep for Mother Teresa? This epic reconstruction of the circumstances surrounding a bloody 1839 uprising aboard the ironically named Spanish slave ship La Amistad (it means friendship) is consistently earnest and well-intentioned but only occasionally moving, despite the efforts of a generally topnotch cast (Matthew McConaughey, of the unidentifiable accent and "dude from Texas" mannerisms, is, however, a liability). Much of the problem lies in the nature of the raw material. The Amistad rebels want only to return to Africa, but are betrayed by their Spanish navigators and wind up in the U.S. There they're put on trial for murder and thrust into the middle of a thorny political and philosophical debate with far-reaching implications for the already-fragile union between slave-owning and non-slave-owning states.
As told, the story of the Amistad is essentially a story of jurisprudence, a textbook illustration of the way the American legal system can, even under inauspicious circumstances, sometimes do exactly what it's meant to do. But while legal arguments can make gripping reading, they often make for stodgy cinema. Around the middle of the film, Cinque (Djimon Hounsou) -- who led the uprising -- tells the brutal story of his abduction and sale into slavery, speaking passionately of the inhuman conditions onboard the ship that brought him to the New World. Those 15 some-odd minutes, which we see in flashback, are pure, gripping cinema, as moving as anything ever committed to film. Unfortunately, they highlight the stuffy, civics-lesson quality of the surrounding material. In a key sequence, former President John Quincy Adams (Anthony Hopkins) contends that the way to win freedom for the Amistad prisoners is to bring their story to life, to tell it in all its human richness and complexity. It's hard to understand why director Steven Spielberg ignored this worthy advice.
Academy Award Nomination: Best Supporting Actor - Anthony Hopkins Best Cinematography - Janusz Kaminski Best Costume Design - Ruth E. Carter Best Original Dramatic Score - John Williams
Performer/Character
Morgan Freeman, Theodore Joadson
Nigel Hawthorne, Martin Van Buren
Anthony Hopkins, John Quincy Adams
Djimon Hounsou, "Cinque"--Sengbe
Matthew McConaughey, Roger Baldwin
David Paymer, US Secretary of State Forsyth,
Pete Postlethwaite, Holabird
Stellan Skarsgard, Lewis Tappan
Razaaq Adoti, Yamba
Abu Bakaar Fofanah, Fala
Anna Paquin Queen Isabella
Tomas Milian, Calderon
Chiwetel Ejiofor, Ensign Covey
Derrick N. Ashong, Buakei
Geno Silva, Ruiz
John Ortiz, Montes
Ralph Brown, Lieutenant Gedney
Darren Burrows, Lieutenant Meade
Allan Rich, Judge Juttson
Paul Guilfoyle, Attorney
Peter Firth, Captain Fitzgerald
Production Credits
Producers: Debbie Allen, Steven Spielberg, Colin Wilson
Exec. Producers: Walter F. Parkes, Laurie MacDonald
Co-Producer: Tim Shriver
Assoc. Producers: Paul Deason, Bonnie Curtis
Director: Steven Spielberg
Writers: David Franzoni, Steve Zaillian (credited as Steven Zaillian)
Editor: Michael Kahn
Musical Composer: John Williams
Production Designer: Rick Carter
Special Effects: Scott Farrar Industrial Light & Magic, Denise Eleanor Ream, Tom Ryba
Cinematographer: Janusz Kaminski