Goodbye Uncle Tom 1971

 
(5 customer reviews)

$12.00

Comes on Region Free DVD-R

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Description

Goodbye Uncle Tom 1971
Addio zio Tom (original title)
2h 16min | Drama | 30 September 1971 (Italy)

Storyline:

Two documentary filmmakers go back in time to the pre-Civil War American South, to film the slave trade.

User review:

Anyone thinking of checking this film out: be warned, words can not express what an awesomely brutal experience it is to sit through. I’m a big fan of horror films, but nothing I ever saw came close to the feeling of revulsion this 30 plus year old film gave me. Trust me, you will have to use the fast forward button on your remote control several times sitting through this one.

A group of Italian journalists goes back in time to America during the time of slavery and documents what they see. The viewer is spared no amount of detail as we are shown what it was like to travel aboard a slave ship, be sold in market as common livestock, be raped, tortured hunted and killed, and basically denied even the slightest bit of human empathy or compassion at every turn.

While Roots covered the same subject matter a whole lot better, it came nowhere near delivering the visceral reaction of this film. For that reason, I recommend people watch Goodbye Uncle Tom. While by no means a great film, if society is truly never to forget the injustices and wrongs of the past, work like this is necessary viewing.

Directors: Gualtiero Jacopetti, Franco Prosperi
Writers: Gualtiero Jacopetti, Franco Prosperi
Stars: Gualtiero Jacopetti, Franco Prosperi, Cicely Browne
Country: Italy
Language: Italian | English
Release Date: 30 September 1971 (Italy)
Filming Locations: Florida, USA

Goodbye Uncle Tom 1971 13
Goodbye Uncle Tom (1971)

123 min|Drama|30 Sep 1971

6.8Rating: 6.8 / 10 from 1,201 users
Two documentary filmmakers go back in time to the pre-Civil War American South, to film the slave trade.

5 reviews for Goodbye Uncle Tom 1971

  1. Anonymous (verified owner)

  2. Edward (verified owner)

    racist and shock effect

  3. John (verified owner)

    I confess I struggle with this film’s now outdated and dubious effort to document the degradation of slavery using a cast that included many non-actors from Haiti. The depiction of gross abuse of people may still shock some viewers. The film’s lack of directional restraint and theatricality, in my view, undermines its hoped-for emotional impact and moral outrage at such inhumanity.

  4. Anonymous (verified owner)

  5. Donald (verified owner)

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