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Friday, May 1, 2020

Africa Addio A.K.A. Africa: Blood and Guts, Farewell Africa (1966)

An Italian mondo documentary directed by Gualtiero Jacopetti and Franco Prosperi, with music by Riz Ortolani.
Scenes of various things happening in Africa in 1964 are shown and explained.
The best parts about this to me are Riz Ortolani's music (knew it sounded like Cannibal Holocaust) and being filmed in Technicolor Techniscope. I did appreciate that it showed a wide variety of material. There was everything from poachers and corpses to white women at the beach in Cape Town. From what I've read, it's all real and not staged. There was stuff that disturbed me and that's pretty gruesome. The zebra scene was not cool. However, the narrator pointed out that the only dangerous animal in Africa is humans. I don't mind seeing human skeletons scattered along a road and being run over by jeeps, but the zebras did not deserve what happened to them. It's difficult to describe something like this. If you're ready to see anything and everything, get ready to read subtitles really quickly because I would recommend it. If you don't want to see nudity, violence and stuff like that, Discovery Channel, National Geographic and Animal Planet skip the grizzly and gruesome details of reality. Africa was not fit for children's programming in the mid-'60s. I rate this awesome just for being so wild and raw.

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