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GOODBYE UNCLE
TOM
Get ready, because this is
quite simply the most hackle-raising, mind-blowing, screamingly offensive
exploitation movie of all time!!! GOODBYE UNCLE TOM is an unabashedly
incendiary look at race relations in America during the early seventies that’s
guaranteed to leave your jaw on the floor.
The Package
The Italian filmmaking team of Gualtiero Jacopetti and Franco Prosperi have
been called “the most devious and irresponsible filmmakers who have ever
lived,” a claim they more than live up to in their many films. Most notable
among those films are the MONDO CANE flicks of 1962-64, which kicked off the
“Mondo” cycle of exploitation documentaries; AFRICA ADDIO (1966), a hard-hitting
look at life in Africa that includes scenes of horrific animal slaughter and
people killed onscreen; and MONDO CANDIDO (1975), a phantasmagoric adaptation of
Voltaire’s CANDIDE containing nearly every imaginable vice.
1971’s GOODBYE UNCLE TOM (a.k.a. ADDIO ZIO TOM),
however, is surely their magnum opus, a sleaze epic that puts the team’s
documentary background to good use and outdoes all their other films in sheer
outrageousness. Indeed, GOODBYE UNCLE TOM is arguably the most effective
cinematic treatment of slavery and its consequences, surpassing all the
others--ROOTS, MANDINGO, DRUM, AMISTAD, ILL-GOTTEN GAINS, BELOVED and
MANDALAY--in every respect.
The film was initially given an extremely limited
grindhouse release that was heavily cut and without credits; its backers
apparently wanted to distance themselves from this wildly controversial film (in
her venomous NEW YORKER review an outraged Pauline Kael made a point of listing
the names of everyone involved) and US distributors over the years have done
their best to pretend it never existed. It’s now legally available as part of
Blue Underground’s limited edition MONDO CANE COLLECTION, a lovingly presented
8-DVD set that includes both the 123-minute English version of GOODBYE UNCLE TOM
(which was popular on the bootleg circuit for several years), as well as the
newly discovered 136-minute Italian language director’s cut, which is even more
potent. If you only know this incredible film in the English language cut than
you owe it to yourself to catch this new and improved version. For that matter,
if you’re an exploitation buff who hasn’t seen the film at all, then you simply
MUST get a hold of GOODBYE UNCLE TOM, ASAP!
The Story
The year is 1971 and America is tearing itself apart at the seams: African
Americans, tired of the mistreatment they’re had to endure at the hands of the
white man, are rising up, with folks like Malcolm X and Leroi Jones (according
to this movie, at least) encouraging their brothers to kill whitey.
In order to examine how things got this way, the filmmakers decide to
travel back in time for a close-up look at slavery in the nineteenth century.
They start off at a New Orleans plantation where they interview several
aristocratic Southerners (whose ranks include UNCLE TOM’S CABIN author Harriett
Beecher Stowe), who sitting around the dinner table enthusiastically defend the
practice of slave-holding while tossing left-overs to black children huddled
under the table. Next the filmmakers visit a slave ship discharging its cargo,
consisting of several hundred Africans suffering from disease and malnutrition.
They also profile a “House Momma” (an overweight black woman who supervises the
slaves) in action, abusing her black and white charges unmercifully, and hunters
who are paid to track down escaped slaves. A bug-eyed doctor methodically
describes how black people don’t have much depth of feeling and so (he claims)
it’s okay for whites to make slaves out of them. We also look in on the
workings of a whorehouse where black women are dressed up and paraded for the
approval of horny white men, and a slave auction where those same white men
barter in human cargo.
But that’s not all: we also see a reenactment of the more lurid portions of
the confessions of Nat Turner (an escaped slave who murdered fifty five whites,
reportedly under the orders of God) transposed to modern times. The film ends
with a black man on a beach demonstrating racial tolerance by popping a white
kid’s ball and grinning maniacally.
The Direction
Those looking for a thoughtful and refined look at racial problems in
American won’t find them here, as this is an extremely lurid, in your face
account. It contains some of the most astounding imagery I’ve seen in any
movie, images I honestly can’t fathom how the filmmakers achieved. It puts me
in mind of the filmmaker Lars Von Trier, who apparently had trouble finding
black actors to portray slaves in his historical drama MANDERLAY, yet in GOODBYE
UNCLE TOM we see literally hundreds of naked black men packed into the bowels of
a slave ship like sardines and greedily clamoring for gruel at a narrow feeding
trough (the film was largely shot in Haiti utilizing native extras and,
curiously enough, NO actors are listed in the credits). Make no mistake:
Gualtiero Jacopetti and Franco Prosperi had a genius for exploitation that
remains unmatched.
Yes, I did say exploitation: note the way the camera lingers on the
sight of black women being raped and even zooms in at opportune moments (Jacopetti
and Prosperi, being very much filmmakers of their time, love their zoom
lens), or the killing of escaped slaves filmed in loving slow motion to be sure
and capture every gruesome moment. Any humanitarian aims the film might have
are obliterated by the outrageously nihilistic finale, which posits that there’s
no hope for reconciliation between the races and America will never get over the
specter of slavery…a pretty smug assertion, I’d say, considering that the
filmmakers are Italian!
Nevertheless, the film is impressive and even admirable in its steadfastly
unblinking and politically incorrect depiction of the slave trade. Jacopetti
and Prosperi utilized many of the same crewmembers they did in their documentary
work, which explains the photorealistic feel of so much of GOODBYE UNCLE TOM.
Exploitation or not, it must be counted as the most monumental and historically
accurate depiction of the horrors of slavery ever put on film.
Vital Statistics
GOODBYE UNCLE TOM (ADDIO ZIO
TOM)
Euro International Films
Directors/Producers/Screenplay/Editing: Gualtiero Jacopetti, Franco Prosperi
Cinematography: Claudio Cirillo, Antonio Climati, Benito Frattari
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