
One Terrific Movie

I don't recall this movie ever being in my local theaters or seeing a review about it, so I rented it unwittingly on the strength of its fine cast. Although I'm a western historian reasonably well versed in overall U.S. history, I'd never heard or read of the Amistad incident, so it was with great interest and curiosity that I popped it into the VCR and hit "play." From the very first moment, the plot and characters drew me in and I was completely mesmerized. The smaller drama of a shipload of intended slaves fighting in the U.S. courts for their freedom playing out against the great internal debate of American agony over slaveholding--plus the enormous pleasure of watching several of the primary participants in that great debate over slavery--John C. Calhoun for the south, John Quincy Adams and Daniel Webster for the north, actually debate the issue, made this movie everything I could want in a film. Anthony Hopkins as John Quincy Adams plays one of the best roles of his career--forget Hannibal Lector, folks, Hopkins IS Adams in all his contrary glory in the last years of his life. Matthew McConeghy as the enslaved Africans' young lawyer plays one of the best roles of his career, and Djimon Honsou in the first role I'd ever seen him play, went immediately to the head of my list of favorite serious actors. The courtroom scene where Honsou rises and shouts "Free! Give me free! Free," moved me as few other movie scenes ever have. As in any plot, there are good guys and bad guys and several just out to make a buck, and the job of the judge to weed out all the claims to the cargo of the Amistad much have been extremely difficult even as we realize with a chill that the Amistad's cargo was human, a fact few of the men involved in the lawsuit seemed to acknowledge. It is extremely instructive today to look back on a time when the issues of slavery or freedom were much clearer and hear spoken some of the great points of a debate that led our country to reject the terrible human toll of slavery and attempt to put into practice our belief that all men are created equal. And, in John Quincy Adams' words, may our Civil War have been indeed the last battle of the American Revolution. This is a terrific film, a real sleeper!
Review ID: 10000000007016910

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