Africa Addio

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

Credits: TheMovieDb.

Film Cast:

  • Narrator (voice): Sergio Rossi
  • (archive footage): Jomo Kenyatta
  • Himself (uncredited): Gualtiero Jacopetti
  • Himself (uncredited): Julius Nyerere
  • Himself (uncredited): Moïse Kapenda Tshombe
  • Himself (uncredited): Richard Gordon Turnbull
  • Himself (uncredited): Ian Yule

Film Crew:

  • Editor: Gualtiero Jacopetti
  • Writer: Franco Prosperi
  • Assistant Editor: Clara Mattei
  • Thanks: Oria Santi
  • Thanks: Romano Federici
  • Thanks: Anna Gentile
  • Thanks: Carolina Ponsomby
  • Production Manager: Stanis Nievo
  • Producer: Angelo Rizzoli
  • Cinematography: Antonio Climati
  • Assistant Camera: Ugo Valenti
  • Sound Mixer: Fausto Ancillai
  • Assistant Camera: Federico Abussi
  • Assistant Editor: Maria Gianandrea
  • Original Music Composer: Riz Ortolani
  • Sound Recordist: Frederick Ridgard
  • Thanks: Consuelo Nievo
  • Thanks: Maurizio Graziosi
  • Special Effects: Tonino Cacciottolo
  • Technical Supervisor: Paolo Ketoff

Movie Reviews:

  • adorablepanic: 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.

Leave a Reply

Discover more from Movie Reviews. TV Coverage. Trailers. Film Festivals.

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading