Fiche Film
Cinéma/TV
LONG Métrage | 2009
Have you heard from Johannesburg? [7/7]: Free At Last [1979 – 1990]
Titre original : Have you heard from Johannesburg?: The Bottom Line [1965 – 1988]
Pays concerné : Afrique du Sud
Durée : 78 minutes
Genre : politique
Type : documentaire

Français

La campagne pour to free Nelson Mandela (imprisoned 27 years) gains momentum. Sa libération, couplée à une pression internationale grandissante et un mouvement populaire national que rien ne peut arrêter à l’intérieur des frontières, conduit à terraser l’apartheid et à la tenue d’élections démocratiques.

La dramatique histoire de la manière dont la lutte anti-apartheid a grandit au sein d’une poignée d’exilés d’Afrique du Sud dans les années 60.

de Connie Field, Usa, 2009

Histoire Sept :
Free At Last [1979 – 1990], (75 mins)

Série documentaire HAVE YOU HEARD FROM JOHANNESBURG


Réalisatrice / Productrice : Connie Field
USA, 2009, documentaire.
Anglais, Vidéo, 1h18 min


Liste des sept (7) films qui composent la série :

Histoire Une : Road To Resistance [1948 – 1964], (58 mins)
www.clarityfilms.org/joburg/story1.html

Histoire Deux : Hell Of A Job [1960 – 1977], (58 mins)
www.clarityfilms.org/joburg/story2.html

Histoire Trois : The New Generation [1960 – 1977], (58 mins)
www.clarityfilms.org/joburg/story2.html

Histoire Quatre : Fair Play [1958 – 1981], (90 mins)
www.clarityfilms.org/joburg/story3.html

Histoire Cinq : From Selma To Soweto [1977 – 1986], (89 mins)
www.clarityfilms.org/joburg/story4.html

Histoire Six : The Bottom Line [1965 – 1988], (86 mins)
www.clarityfilms.org/joburg/story5.html

Histoire Sept : Free At Last [1979 – 1990], (75 mins)
www.clarityfilms.org/joburg/story6.html

Durée Totale de la série : 5h50

Chaque histoire peut être regardé de manière indépendante sans que cela gêne la compréhension

Mots clés :
Mouvement anti-apartheid movement apartheid South Africa social justice human rights racisme documentary Oliver Tambo Nelson Mandela history histoire droits de l’homme droits humains

English

The campaign to free Nelson Mandela (imprisoned 27 years) gains momentum. His release, coupled with ongoing international pressure and an unstoppable internal mass movement, lead to the toppling of apartheid and the holding of democratic elections.

« The UDF was the straw that broke the camel’s back. »
– Les De Villiers, South African Government

Diving into the heart of the conflict, South Africans tell the story of the most important effort in the anti-apartheid campaign of the 80’s: the alliance that brought together freedom fighters in South Africa as never before. A mass movement gains unprecedented momentum when three generations of resistance fighters band together as The United Democratic Front (UDF). Faced with growing international isolation, the apartheid government tries to win allies and convince the world of the merit of its piecemeal reforms even as it struggles to suppress open revolt, at times using savage secret tactics. The UDF protests climax in a fierce campaign of defiance, and internationally, Nelson Mandela becomes a household name as the campaign to free him ignites a worldwide crusade. Caught between an unstoppable internal mass movement and ongoing international pressure, the apartheid regime is finally forced to the negotiating table and at last lifts the decades-long bans on the ANC. After twenty-seven years in prison, Nelson Mandela is released, sparking a global celebration as he tours the world to thank all.

After 30 years in exile, Oliver Tambo is finally able to return to South Africa. But the struggle has taken a heavy toll on him and he will die one year before his comrade, Nelson Mandela, is elected the first black president of a democratic South Africa.

by Connie Field, Usa, 2009, (78 minutes)

Story Seven: Free At Last [1979 – 1990], (75 mins)


Featuring (seven films) :

Story One: Road To Resistance [1948 – 1964], (58 mins)
www.clarityfilms.org/joburg/story1.html

Story Two: Hell Of A Job [1960 – 1977], (58 mins)
www.clarityfilms.org/joburg/story2.html

Story Three: The New Generation [1960 – 1977], (58 mins)
www.clarityfilms.org/joburg/story2.html

Story Four: Fair Play [1958 – 1981], (90 mins)
www.clarityfilms.org/joburg/story3.html

Story Five: From Selma To Soweto [1977 – 1986], (89 mins)
www.clarityfilms.org/joburg/story4.html

Story Six: The Bottom Line [1965 – 1988], (86 mins)
www.clarityfilms.org/joburg/story5.html

Story Seven: Free At Last [1979 – 1990], (75 mins)
www.clarityfilms.org/joburg/story6.html

Runtime: 510 mins.

Series Story Descriptions
Part 1

Road to Resistance (58 mins.)
As the U.N. adopts the Declaration of Human Rights, South Africa heads in the opposite direction and implements apartheid. A mass movement is born, then crushed, and Nelson Mandela is jailed for life.

Hell of a Job (58 mins.)
The future of the movement is on the shoulders of Oliver Tambo, who escapes into exile and begins a 30-year journey to engage the world in the struggle to bring democracy to South Africa.

The New Generation (58 mins.)
Youth in South Africa and around theouth in South Africa and around the world are next to join the growing movement against apartheid, and the brutal suppression of a youth uprising in Soweto galvanizes public support for sanctions against South Africa.

Part 2
Fair Play (95 mins.)
Athletes and activists around the world hit white South Africa where it hurts: on the playing field. The sports boycott pushes apartheid South Africa out of international sporting competitions, isolating it in an area of passionate importance.

From Selma to Soweto (90 mins)
African Americans alter U.S. foreign policy for the first time in history, successfully pressuring the U.S. to impose sanctions and politically isolate Pretoria.

Part 3
The Bottom Line (83 mins)
International grassroots campaigns against Polaroid, Shell, Barclay’s, General Motors and others doing business in South Africa economically isolate the apartheid regime and become the first successful effort to use economic pressure to help bring down a government.

Free At Last (75 mins)
An uprising in South Africa becomesthe final blow in the cumulativeworld effort to topple apartheid. Nelson Mandela becomes a household name as the campaign to free him ignites a=worldwide crusade.


HAVE YOU HEARD FROM JOHANNESBURG is a powerful seven-part documentary series by two-time Academy Award nominee Connie Field that shines light on the global citizens movements that took on South Africa’s apartheid regime. It reveals how everyday people helped challenge and end one of the greatest injustices the world has ever known.
HAVE YOU HEARD FROM JOHANNESBURG begins with the story of freedom fighters in South Africa who are systemically killed, jailed or exiled for resisting their political oppression. Embattled South Africans call on the global community to take action, laying the groundwork for a decades-long international campaign. People around the world take up the anti-apartheid cause, challenging their governments, powerful corporations and other institutions to face up to the immorality of their collaboration with apartheid. HAVE YOU HEARD FROM JOHANNESBURG follows three generations of the struggle inside South Africa and battles waged in sports arenas and cathedrals, in embassies and corporate boardrooms, at rock concerts and in gas stations around the globe. Pulling together the many threads of international anti-apartheid action for the first time in any medium, HAVE YOU HEARD FROM JOHANNESBURG is an inspiring example for citizens and movements around the world.

One of the greatest weapons in the struggle against apartheid was the international sports boycott. Featuring a youthful Dennis Brutus at his brilliant best, Sam Ramsamy, Peter Hain, sports personalities and administrators, this meticulously researched documentary, with rare footage and revealing back story, unpacks the process of how the boycott took shape and effect. Step by difficult step, a dedicated and growing group of activists orchestrated the isolation of South Africa from the sports arenas, culminating in South Africa’s exclusion first from the Olympics, and then, finally, where it hurt most, from international rugby.

Producer/Director: CONNIE FIELD

Series Editor: GREGORY SCHARPEN
Principal Cinematography: TOM HURWITZ
Principal Historical Consultants: DR. GAIL GERHART, DR. ROBERT EDGAR, DR. CLAYBORNE CARSON, E.S. REDDY

Principal Funders: THE FORD FOUNDATION, THE JOHN D. AND CATHERINE T. MACARTHUR FOUNDATION, THE NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE HUMANITIES


For more information about the series, visit http://www.clarityfilms.org. To get involved in the global engagement campaign around the series, please visit http://activevoice.net/haveyouheard.html.

Tags :
anti-apartheid movement apartheid South Africa social justice human rights racism documentary Oliver Tambo Nelson Mandela history
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