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Out of Africa

 
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Out of Africa

  • Director: Sydney Pollack
  • AMG Rating: starstarstarstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Biopic, Romantic Epic
  • Themes: Self-Destructive Romance, Culture Clash, Infidelity
  • Main Cast: Meryl Streep, Robert Redford, Klaus Maria Brandauer, Michael Kitchen, Malick Bowens
  • Release Year: 1985
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 161 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG

Plot

Out of Africa is drawn from the life and writings of Danish author Isak Dinesen, who during the time that the film's events occured was known by her married name, Karen Blixen-Flecke. For convenience's sake, Karen (Meryl Streep) has married Baron Bor Blixen-Flecke (Klaus Maria Brandauer). In 1914, the Baron moves himself and his wife to a plantation in Nairobi, then leaves Karen to her own devices as he returns to his womanizing and drinking. Soon, Karen has fallen in love with charming white hunter Denys Finch Hatton (Robert Redford), who prefers a no-strings relationship. A woman who prides herself on her independence, Blixen finds herself unhappily in thrall to a aloof man -- and doubly unhappy for living out such a cliché situation. Although Redford received a lion's share of criticism for his too-American performance, Streep has rarely been better, and the film's perfectly measured pace is offset by David Watkin's stunning location photography. The movie was nominated for 11 Academy Awards and won 7, including Best Picture, Best Director for Sydney Pollack, Best Adapted Screenplay for Kurt Luedtke, and Best Cinematography for Watkin. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Review

Out of Africa gives its audience one of the screen's great rarities -- an intelligent romance combined with the sweeping perspective of a great epic. Never mind that Robert Redford is much too American to be convincingly British, he conveys a stoic sense of adventurism that makes him an ideal screen match for the reserved passion of Meryl Streep. The film's tech credits are top-notch, particularly the cinematography of David Watkin, whose spectacular location shooting makes the film a visual treat. A clear favorite on Oscar night, Out of Africa took Best Picture, Best Director Sydney Pollack, and five other awards, including one for Watkin. ~ Richard Gilliam, All Movie Guide

Cast

Joseph Thiaka - Kamate; Stephen Kinyanjui - Kinanjui; Michael Gough - Delamere; Suzanna Hamilton - Felicity; Rachel Kempson - Lady Belfield; Graham Crowden - Lord Belfield; Niven Boyd - Young Officer; Mike Burgara - Juma; Mike A. Burgos - Juma; Maryam D'Abo; Iman - Mariammo; Tristram Jellinek - 1st Commissioner; Kenneth Mason - Banker; Annabel Maule - Lady Byrne; Donal McCann - Doctor; Leslie Phillips - Sir Joseph; Allaudin Qureshi - Rajiv; Shane Rimmer - Belknap; Job Seda - Kanuthia; Abdullah Sunado - Esa; Sbish Trzebinski - Beefy Drunk; Mohammed Umar - Ismail; Benny Young - Minister; Stephen B. Grimes - 2nd Commissioner; Muriel Gross - Lady Delamere; Ann Palmer - Dowager; Amanda Parkin - Victoria; Keith Pearson - Missionary Teacher; Peter Strong - Huge Man; Mary Selway

Credit

Colin Grimes - Art Director, Cliff Robinson - Art Director, Judith Thurman - Associate Producer, Terence A. Clegg - Co-producer, Milena Canonero - Costume Designer, Sydney Pollack - Director, Pembroke J. Herring - Editor, Sheldon Kahn - Editor, Franz Steininger - Editor, Frederic Steinkamp - Editor, William Steinkamp - Editor, John Barry - Composer (Music Score), J. Roy Helland - Makeup, Mary Hillman - Makeup, Gary D. Liddiard - Makeup, Norma Hill-Patton - Makeup, Stephen B. Grimes - Production Designer, Herbert Westbrook - Production Designer, David Watkin - Cinematographer, Sydney Pollack - Producer, Josie MacAvin - Set Designer, David Harris - Special Effects, Peter Handford - Sound/Sound Designer, Kurt Luedtke - Screenwriter, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - Featured Music, Isak Dinesen - Book Author, Errol Trzebinski - Book Author

Similar Movies

Chocolat; Mountains of the Moon; Reds; Shadow on the Sun; White Mischief; Legends of the Fall; The English Patient; I Dreamed of Africa; The Journey To Kafiristan; Chinese Box
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Wikipedia: Out of Africa (film)
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Out of Africa

theatrical poster
Directed by Sydney Pollack
Produced by Sydney Pollack
Written by Source books:
Judith Thurman
Errol Trzebinski
Karen Blixen
Screenplay:
Kurt Luedtke
Starring Robert Redford
Meryl Streep
Klaus Maria Brandauer
Music by John Barry
Cinematography David Watkin
Editing by Fredric Steinkamp
William Steinkamp
Pembroke Herring
Sheldon Kahn
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release date(s) 18 December 1985 (US)
Running time 160 mins.
Country United States
Language English
Budget US$31,000,000 (est.)
Gross revenue US$87,071,205[1]

Out of Africa is a 1985 film[1] based loosely on the autobiographical book by Isak Dinesen (pseudonym of Karen Blixen) published in 1937, as well as Dinesen's Shadows on the Grass and other sources. The movie received 28 film awards, including seven Academy Awards.


Contents

Book and film

The book describes events during 1914–1931 concerning European settlers and the native people in the bush country of Kenya (British East Africa), from seaside Mombasa to Nairobi, from Mount Kenya to Kilimanjaro, as told from the lyrical, poetic viewpoint of Danish Baroness Karen von Blixen-Finecke. The book was continually in print during the 20th century, and reprinted by many publishers.

The film was adapted by Kurt Luedtke and directed by Sydney Pollack. It starred Meryl Streep (as Baroness Karen von Blixen-Finecke), Robert Redford (as Denys Finch Hatton), Klaus Maria Brandauer (as Baron Bror von Blixen-Finecke), Michael Kitchen (as Berkeley Cole), Malick Bowens (as Farah), Stephen Kinyanjui (as Chief), Michael Gough (Delamere), Suzanna Hamilton (as Felicity, who is based on famous aviatrix Beryl Markham), and supermodel Iman (in a cameo role as Mariammo).

Plot

The film opens in Denmark as an older Karen Blixen (Streep) briefly remembers hunting in Denmark, then the years she spent in Africa (1914–1931). Looming large in her memory is the figure of Denys Finch Hatton (Redford), a local big-game hunter she met when she arrived in Africa to start what she thought would be a dairy farm together with her husband, Baron Bror von Blixen-Finecke (Brandauer).

Things turn out differently for her than anticipated, as the blue-blooded but poor Baron has used her money to purchase a coffee plantation instead of a dairy farm. He also shows little inclination to put any work into it, preferring to hunt game instead. While from the beginning, their marriage is depicted as mostly symbiotic (her family has money, while the Baron has a title), Karen does eventually develop feelings for him and is distressed when she learns of his extramarital affairs.

To make matters worse, she contracts syphilis from her philandering husband, which at the time was a very dangerous condition, necessitating her return to Denmark for a possible cure using the (1910) medicine Salvarsan (before the advent of penicillin).

After she has recovered and returned to Africa, a relationship between her and Denys begins to develop. However, after many unsuccessful attempts at turning their affair into a lasting relationship, she realizes that Denys is as impossible to own or tame as Africa itself.

Karen lives surrounded by fine European furniture and opens a school to teach European reading and customs to the native people, whereas Denys prefers the freedom of the outdoors and leaves the natives to their own customs. His eventual death in a plane crash is foreshadowed in the movie by the tale of Maasai people who would perish in captivity. At his funeral in the Ngong Hills, as Karen prepares to toss a handful of soil into the grave, she hesitates, then turns away from the other Europeans, brushing her hand instead through her hair, in the native custom.

In the film Karen is forced to return to Denmark, following a catastrophic fire that destroys her entire crop of coffee. After more than 20 years, Karen has become an author, a storyteller, writing about her experiences and letters from Africa, and remembering.

Cast

Production

The movie tells the story as a series of six loosely coupled episodes from Karen's life, intercut with her narration. The final narration, about Denys's grave, is from her book Out of Africa, while the others have been written for the film in imitation of her very lyrical writing style. The pace of the movie is often slow, reflecting the book, "Natives dislike speed, as we dislike noise..."[2]

Out of Africa was filmed using descendants of several Kikuyu named in the book, near the actual Ngong Hills outside Nairobi, but not there inside Karen's (second) 3-bedroom house "Mbagathi" (now the museum). The shooting took place in her first house Mbogani, just close to the museum, a dairy today. The scenes set in Denmark were actually filmed in Surrey, England.

Differences between the film and real life events

The movie quotes the start of the book, "I had a farm in Africa, at the foot of the Ngong Hills" [p. 3], and Denys recites, "He prayeth well that loveth well both man and bird and beast" from The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, which becomes the epitaph inscribed on Finch-Hatton's grave obelisk [p. 370].

The movie differs significantly from the book, leaving out the locust swarm, local shootings, Karen's writings with the German military, and down-scaling the size of her 4,000 acre (16 km²) farm, 800 Kikuyu workers, and 18-oxen wagon.

It also takes liberties with Karen's and Denys's romance. They met at a hunting club, not in the plains. Denys was away from Kenya for two years on military assignment in Egypt, which is not mentioned. Denys took up flying and began to lead safaris after he moved in with Karen. The film also ignores the fact that Karen was pregnant at least once with Denys's child, but miscarried. Furthermore, Denys was English, but this was downplayed by the hiring of Robert Redford, an inarguably all-American actor who had previously worked with Pollack. When Redford signed on to play Finch Hatton, he did so fully intending to play him as an Englishman. This was later nixed by director Sydney Pollack who felt it would prove too distracting for audiences, hearing Redford come out with an English accent. In fact, Redford had to redub some of his line readings from early takes in the filming where he still sported a trace of English accent.

Soundtrack

The music for Out of Africa, including Mozart's Clarinet Concerto and African traditional songs, also has many 2nd-generation compositions by John Barry, based on his older music "temp-tracked" in film-editing by director Sydney Pollack, from previous Barry films, such as Born Free (1966), Robin and Marian (1976), and The Last Valley (1970-71) which inspired the music Flying over Africa, over Lake Nakuru's flamingos. Barry's score was listed at #15 on AFI's 100 Years of Film Scores.

Technical

In the Director Notes on the DVD[3] for The Interpreter, Sydney Pollack states that he filmed Out of Africa and subsequent films of that decade in "4 to 3"; and that it "...probably was one I should have had in widescreen". This aspect ratio of 4:3 conflicts with IMDB, which states that the aspect is 1.85:1, the equivalent of 16:9.[4] In these director's notes, Pollack states that prior to Out of Africa (1985), he shot exclusively in "widescreen" and did not resume the wide format until The Interpreter in 2005.

In 1985 there were no operating steam locomotives in Kenya. Therefore it was decided to assemble a train which was then pushed from the rear by a diesel locomotive. The steam locomotive had burning tires installed in the smoke box, liquid oxygen was used to give the required effect.

The steam locomotive and passengers cars used can be seen today in the Nairobi Railway Museum.

Awards and honors

Academy Awards

The film won seven Academy Awards and was nominated in a further four categories.[5]

Won
Nominated

Golden Globes

The film won three Golden Globes (Best Picture, Supporting Actor, Original Score).

AFI

American Film Institute recognition

References

  1. ^ a b "Out of Africa - Overview" (cast/gross/plot), allmovie, 2007, webpage: amovie36787.
  2. ^ Out of Africa, p. 252
  3. ^ The Interpreter, DVD#25835, Universal Studios
  4. ^ IMDB: Technical specifications for Out of Africa (1985)
  5. ^ "NY Times: Out of Africa". NY Times. http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/36787/Out-of-Africa/awards. Retrieved 2009-01-01. 

External links


Awards and achievements
Preceded by
Amadeus
Academy Award for Best Picture
1985
Succeeded by
Platoon
Preceded by
Amadeus
Golden Globe for Best Picture - Drama
1986
Succeeded by
Platoon

 
 
Learn More
autobiography (Grammar)
Out of Africa [Original Score] (1985 Album by John Barry)
Dinesen, Isak (Danish writer)

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