Movie Reviews for Cry Freedom

Cry Freedom

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Movie Reviews of Cry Freedom

Movie Review: High School Seniors' Comments
Summary: 5 Stars

J.E. Gotowos (teacher of EFL, German, and drama):
I recently had the students of an English major senior high school class, that I am teaching, in Hamburg, Germany, watch Richard Attenborough's movie "Cry Freedom." Here are their first responses and reviews, which I asked them to come up with:

FIREWORK OF EMOTION
The movie is totally rousing and not boring for a minute, though we had a lot of backround-information about the cruel situation in South Africa.
We were emotionally touched by all the scenes.
The actors did a great job by putting the idea across and relievingly the character of Steven Biko brought up some laughs as well.
C.W. & S.A.-M. -----

STEVE BIKO'S SPIRIT, CAUGHT IN DENZEL WASHINGTON'S PRECISE ARTISTRY
Initially, there is to say that "Cry Freedom" changed our view on white people's participation in the general struggle against apartheid, but especially in the Biko issue of 1977. Though the white man's fate definitely drives out Biko's part in the story, we were nevertheless able to emphasize with the protagonists and their decision making processes maybe for a little too long (the film takes three hours and leaves you pretty unsettled and sad, if that's for good or bad...).
Above all, we adoringly look up to an exceptionally handsome and skilled Denzel Washington, who succeeded in posting a true story of hope, power and cruelty to the outside world. With this intention, "Cry Freedom" combines expressive pictures with beautiful music, opens your eyes for a true story and catches you for three hours with its sad and ongoing demand for equality .
Written by TILLI -----

REVIEW - CRY FREEDOM
The movie "Cry Freedom" is not only a biography of Steven Biko, the Freedom Fighter, but also about a whole nation struggle against Apartheid.
Before watching the movie we made sure we had enough backround information about Apartheid and Steven Biko. However, while watching the movie we were surprised how much more we were touched by it then we had been before by just reading it. The actors also did a great job in making the movie seem authentic. All in all, the movie made us conscious about how extreme the Apartheid regime was.
Heidi&Melanie

OUTSTANDING MOVIE, BUT A LITTLE TOO LONG
Producing an historic movie based on a true story is always challenging and very dangerous particulary when there are still people alive that experienced it. Meeting the audience's expectations is difficult in such a case; However, the movie Cry Freedom, based on Donald Woods book BIKO by Richard Attenborough, is a splendid historical movie. Firstly the performance is more than superb from both main and supporting actors. Furthermore the music aptly underlines the movie's emotional range from dramatic to inspiring. Moreover the the development of Wood's and Biko's friendship is very touching, going hand in hand with Wood's transition from a liberal to an activist, which is incredibly captivating as well.
The movie is probably even more strinking to someone without backround knowlege on the aparteid policies and crimes since Biko's death portraits latter vividly.
The length of the movie is the only thing to find fault with. We believe the movie could be more compressed because the movie lacks density in the end to the point that strength fades.
Although overall it is truly an outsanding movie!
Andre & Sina -----

SAD BUT TRUE
The movie really touched me. I know what was going on in the apartheid area before. I watched the movie, but it's different, if you see it through the characters eyes. You can identify yourself better with the person's life.
M.S. -----

After I watched that movie, I was shocked. It's different to know the history about South Africa then have it put in front of yourself. Steven Biko who was played by Denzel Washington did a excellent job. Also the interacting story between Biko and Woods was great. The film board put up a very good impression this time. Also,
the music was great, but the film was a little long.
J.M-B. -----

"CRY FREEDOM" MADE YOU THINK...
The film "Cry freedom" by Richard Attenborough was a success because the two main characters were played amazingly authentic.
Obviously Attenborough made a lot of researches for this reason the audience got an realistic impression of the circumstances during apartheid in South Africa. Moreover the life of Steven Biko was well presented and the audience got to know his strong, nonviolent pursuit of changing the Blacks consciousness.
In order to make the audience think about the subject, Attenborough showed the violence towards the Blacks in a way that you would almost want to look away or had to fight back your tears.
I.D. und L.K. -----

A MAGNIFICENT AND TOUCHING MOVIE
At the beginning of the movie I didn't know what to expect, but I was positive surprised. The movie made me very thoughtful and I got a really good impression, how it must of been during Apartheid. In my opinion Biko's live was very touching and frightening. I'm sure that he wasn't the only victim, who suffered that much from Apartheid.
Leonie -----

Movie Review: A Study of Loss
Summary: 5 Stars

The criticism I've heard when this movie is being discussed has always bothered me to some degree. The knock against it is that Denzel Washington is so strong in the role of Steve Biko, and he himself was such an important figure in South African history, that he deserves a movie of his own. Now, while I agree with this assessment, and hope that maybe a Djimon Hounsou or Chiwetel Ejiofor will revisit the role at some future date, I can't help but feel that these people are judging the movie for what they wanted it to be, and not what's actually up there on the screen.

Not only that, but I feel that the loss of Biko midway through the film actually serves a purpose. And that purpose is, by the final half-hour, when we're privileged enough to have a few flashbacks of him, we realize what a loss he has been to the movie, and to the world. So by having him cut out of a good portion of the film, we're made to grieve his death while the movie continues to soldier forward.

Oh, and by the way, it's not like that second half is a dog, either. It's just not quite as good as the first. I mean, if this movie were cut in two (ala "Kill Bill"), we'd being saying that part one was brilliant, while part two was merely very good. And considering that the 80's were hardly a golden age for Hollywood, that ain't bad.

Now, getting back to Denzel, this is not only the best performance of his career, but possibly one of the greatest ever captured on celluloid, and I find it deeply disconcerting that he didn't win an Academy Award for this performance while he was honored for a menial role in "Training Day" (I'll post a review later explaining my opinion). Not only that, but why, dare I ask, was he nominated in a supporting role, when the Golden Globes acknowledged him as a leading man? Sure, his character was murdered an hour and a half into the movie, but Anthony Hopkins had no more of a lead in "Silence of the Lambs" than Denzel was here.

I hate to cry racism against "liberal" Hollywood, but how else can you explain this, along with the fact that some of the best performances of recent years, given by black actors, have been overlooked? For example, Delroy Lindo in "Clockers," Giancarlo Espisito in "Bob Roberts," Larenz Tate in "Why Do Fools Fall in Love," and the list just goes on and on. I could probably name 50 more if given the time. Not to mention the fact that Spike Lee has never been nominated for Best Director, not even for "Malcolm X" or "Do the Right Thing," neither of which can be disputed as one of the best films of their respective years.

But now I've gone off on a rant, and forgotten to mention Kevin Kline's great supporting work here, and Richard Attenborough, who has yet to top this movie in the seventeen years since it's release. This is also his best work to date, in my opinion, and even tops his much more lauded "Gandhi."

Of course, if you're watching this movie for the first time and don't understand why anyone would make such a fuss about it, I challenge you to sit through the closing credits without being moved to tears. It's just a remarkable bit of filmmaking, simple but powerful, and may be the best end credit sequence since Martin Ritt's "The Front."


Movie Review: An important film
Summary: 5 Stars

Denzel Washington plays the legendary Steve Biko in this late-80's film, while Kevin Kline plays a top journalist who befriends Washington's character in South Africa. Denzel is my favorite actor, and although he doesn't get a lot of screen time, this is one of his strongest roles ever(and you know that's saying a lot). Not only does he nail down the African accent, but he portray's Biko's renown concern and persistence.
This movie was awesome for the first hour. I could not take my eyes off it! As the inevitable came around this point, the movie turns to Kevin Kline's character who's trying to escape South Africa and spread Biko's story and message. It drags on quite extensively(the movie is over 2 & 1/2 hours) but it still maintains, enough to keep it's five-star rating in my book. There were some other flaws, like how quickly Kline's character switched from hostility to befriending Biko. That happened so quickly I couldn't tell when they actually saw eye-to-eye. The film was beautifully shot, especially for the 1980's, and I love the scene where Biko is speaking at an outdoor stadium being held up by dozens of supporters. Keep an eye out for Joseph Marcell(Geoffry the butler from Fresh Prince of Bel-Air) who has a couple crucial scenes at the end playing a character aptly named 'Moses.'
The reason this movie was so memorable to me was because it really got me thinking how oppressed black folks have been throughout history. Sure, other movies have depicted this and maybe display this better, but Sh##! To find out how black people were even kicked aside and discriminated against in South Africa was eye-opening! I am beginning to understand their frustration as a race, and even those in America, more and more. Seeing this movie, and being Caucasian myself, you get a sense of why the black brethren distrust the white man or see him as evil, and there's no propoganda or direct bashing of the white race in this film. Just depiction. I, myself, kind of feel like a jerk for what my race has done over all these years. And believe me, we may think this sh#t's resolved and straight today, but we got a long ways to go!
You really gotta hand it to Denzel. He's tackled some of the biggest black icons so effortlessly, not only Malcolm X, Reuben Carter, among others, but Steven Biko as well. He may just be an actor, but he must have some strong beliefs in his own race as well to portray legends like these! It would be great to see him start speaking up for his people and directly to his people, a la Bill Cosby. I got this movie off Amazon because I could not find it in stores, but I recommend searching for it yourself or buying it however you can...

Movie Review: Denzel IS Stephen Biko!
Summary: 5 Stars

When I was a high school English teacher and read and discussed "Cry, the Beloved Country" with my seniors, I always showed "Cry Freedom" in conjunction. Students were mesmerized. While the novel was set in South Africa with apartheid partly responsible for the crime that takes place, apartheid is as much a major character as Stephen Biko or Donald Woods in the movie.

In case you are confused, "Cry, the Beloved Country" is the lyrical novel by Alan Paton, published in 1948 and set in South Africa, Paton's homeland. Three racial groups, lived together, not in harmony, there: the Dutch, who later called themselves Afrikaaners, who settled there three hundred years earlier and believed they sere sent by God to take control; the English who settled everywhere; and the native groups, of which Bantu was one. This novel is a moving testament to the forgiving nature of men and how two men from totally different worlds can come together in grace and acceptance.

In "Cry Freedom," the film based on the nonfiction book by the same name, is a story of Stephen Biko, a black South African political activist who understood the inherent dangers in being an activist but lived by the creed that a man has to do what a man has to do. He is befriended in respect and admiration by a white American journalist, Donald Woods. Their two stories are equally important because of the consequences of their actions.

Denzel Washinton performs the role of Biko as if he was Biko--I was that convinced. His South African accent is perfect. I personally believe this is the best acting role of his distinguished career. Kevin Kline is also excellent and performs one of my favorite roles he has ever played.

Biko brashly challenges the Afrikanner government and is banned from ever speaking again. He does so, is arrested and tortured into a coma and dies of a brain hemorrhage as he is transported 600 miles away to a hospital. Obviously, the government wanted him dead.

The rest of the film details Woods and his family's departure from South Africa, knowing he may be next because of his support of Biko. His escape is important in the Biko story because it is Woods who brings it to print and thus to film. Without Woods we probably would not know the Biko story of courage and dedication to cry for freedom for his people.

This is a must-see film. One that mesmerizes 17-year-olds and makes them angry, white and black, at injustice is not a film to miss. Plus the information interspersed during the credits will make you gasp at the sheer audacity and cruelty of man.

Movie Review: Historical Masterpiece!!
Summary: 5 Stars

The first time I saw this movie was as a hard to please teen in High School. It was during the hot Aussie summmer months and all myself and my fellow classmates wanted to was install some airconditioning, put our feet up and sip lemonade. What we didn't want to do was watch yet another boring tear jerker about the harsher sides of life in a country that we couldn't give two hoots about. What we got was a lesson in life.

From the moment Cry Freedom began I was hooked. Not only does it present to you superb landscapes and two famous Hollywood actors, but it also gave you a tremendous insight into the horrors of Apartheid. This movie was a factual account of the lives of Bantu Steven Biko (the Black South African Activist who was prepared to die for his beliefs) and white South African newspaper editor Donald Woods. The movie was based on the published novel written by Woods himself which was smuggled out of South Africa to England where it could be read by the public (the books by Woods and this movie were both banned materials in South Africa). It is a sad and honest account of the frustrating way of life for a black person living under the thumb of white supremists. Hopefully others will see this numbing account and allow their eyes to be opened to the injustice continuing around the world.

This is one of my all time favourite movies. One of the most powerful stories told on the silver screen.

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