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Africa Blood and Guts
Africa Blood and Guts — Every Scene Looks You Straight in the Eye... and Spits!
1966 6.5 107.7K R views saved
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Africa Blood and Guts

1966 6.5 107.7K R views saved
Africa Blood and Guts

A chronicle of the violence that occurred in much of the African continent throughout the 1960s. As many African countries were transitioning from colonial rule to other forms of government, violent political upheavals were frequent. Revolutions in Zanzibar and Kenya in which thousands were killed are shown, the violence not only political; there is also extensive footage of hunters and poachers slaughtering different types of wild animals.

Countries: IT
Languages: Italian
Content Rating: R
Runtime: 2hrs 18min
Status: Released
Release date: 1966-02-11
Release format: Streaming — Mar 04, 2025
Comments
@kodakbear 5 years ago

TLDR: _Africa Addio_ is a deeply hated Mondo "shockumentary" from the directors Jacopetti and Prosperi, who are either some of the most talented and misunderstood artists of all time or some of the worst scum of the earth depending on who you ask. **If you can handle it, you should watch it. It very well may change the way you see the world.** ==But don't watch the English language edition.==

You'll find on the internet a variety of criticism of the movie from people of all different perspectives, and no doubt that some of them felt the need to give this film a low rating as a result. This, it seems, is in large part because _Africa Addio_ is an incredibly difficult movie to watch. It is utterly terrible, the narration aiding the feeling of a _Planet Earth_-type scientific observer, detached from agency and forced into a state of absolute horror; the music and editing builds on that; it feels as if you're watching some school-age presentation about the history of some supposedly glorious empire but something has gone horribly wrong. It is worse than every horror movie ever created because the gruesomeness depicted is not obviously impossible, but has been already realized.

Nothing outside of pure psychopathy can make you feel nothing for this film.

This film received immense criticism and was legitimately under the threat of being banned in multiple nations because the events happening in Africa did not fit with the political/social mindset of the West at that time.* It still doesn't.

But that's just it, the film isn't politically charged, it's matter of fact. It has political themes, sure, Africa is being ~~decolonized~~ **liberated**, but that's just a part of the framing of the events. Explanation is given, as impartial and factual as if you're watching a _Planet Earth_ episode.

The message is that even actions that are (or seem) good or just, e.g. decolonization, can lead to unintended horror.

The best way to summarize _Africa Addio_ is really with part of the opening introduction from the narrator: "What the camera sees it films pitilessly, without sympathy, without taking sides. This film only says farewell to the old Africa and gives the world a picture of its agony."

==**The English-language edition should be avoided. Watch the original Italian with subtitles.**== The English-language edition changes the narration and edits out a majority of the political scenes so you don't know why/what is happening in front of you. Without that, you have every reason to hate this movie and no reason to like it. Search for _Africa Addio_ instead of the dramatic _Africa: Blood and Guts_ to avoid this.

*In fact, the filmmakers were sued for allegedly forging helicopter footage of an Arab massacre on Zanzibar. The footage was vetted though, and the filmmakers were acquitted.

2
@kodakbear 5 years ago

TLDR: _Africa Addio_ is a deeply hated Mondo "shockumentary" from the directors Jacopetti and Prosperi, who are either some of the most talented and misunderstood artists of all time or some of the worst scum of the earth depending on who you ask. **If you can handle it, you should watch it. It very well may change the way you see the world.** ==But don't watch the English language edition.==

You'll find on the internet a variety of criticism of the movie from people of all different perspectives, and no doubt that some of them felt the need to give this film a low rating as a result. This, it seems, is in large part because _Africa Addio_ is an incredibly difficult movie to watch. It is utterly terrible, the narration aiding the feeling of a _Planet Earth_-type scientific observer, detached from agency and forced into a state of absolute horror; the music and editing builds on that; it feels as if you're watching some school-age presentation about the history of some supposedly glorious empire but something has gone horribly wrong. It is worse than every horror movie ever created because the gruesomeness depicted is not obviously impossible, but has been already realized.

Nothing outside of pure psychopathy can make you feel nothing for this film.

This film received immense criticism and was legitimately under the threat of being banned in multiple nations because the events happening in Africa did not fit with the political/social mindset of the West at that time.* It still doesn't.

But that's just it, the film isn't politically charged, it's matter of fact. It has political themes, sure, Africa is being ~~decolonized~~ **liberated**, but that's just a part of the framing of the events. Explanation is given, as impartial and factual as if you're watching a _Planet Earth_ episode.

The message is that even actions that are (or seem) good or just, e.g. decolonization, can lead to unintended horror.

The best way to summarize _Africa Addio_ is really with part of the opening introduction from the narrator: "What the camera sees it films pitilessly, without sympathy, without taking sides. This film only says farewell to the old Africa and gives the world a picture of its agony."

==**The English-language edition should be avoided. Watch the original Italian with subtitles.**== The English-language edition changes the narration and edits out a majority of the political scenes so you don't know why/what is happening in front of you. Without that, you have every reason to hate this movie and no reason to like it. Search for _Africa Addio_ instead of the dramatic _Africa: Blood and Guts_ to avoid this.

*In fact, the filmmakers were sued for allegedly forging helicopter footage of an Arab massacre on Zanzibar. The footage was vetted though, and the filmmakers were acquitted.

2
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