Ganga Zumba (film) explained

Ganga Zumba
Director:Carlos Diegues
Screenplay:Leopoldo Serran
Rubem Rocha Filho
Carlos Diegues
Based On:Novel by João Felício dos Santos
Starring:Antonio Pitanga
Lea Garcia
Eliezer Gomes
Country:Brazil

Ganga Zumba is a Brazilian film made in 1963 by Carlos Diegues and released in 1972 about slavery in Brazil.[1] It portrays the life of the leader of the Quilombo dos Palmares, Ganga Zumba. When he took power the Quilombo (which was how the havens built by runaway slaves were called) already had existed for approximately one hundred years. Its soundtrack was composed by Moacir Santos and played by Nara Leão, with African rituals and dance performed by the Sons of Gandhy group.[2] It was filmed in accurate locations as proposed by the Cinema Novo. Also present in the movie were the musicians Cartola and Dona Zica.

Based on a book written by João Felício dos Santos, Ganga Zumba, the movie discusses the context of sugar production in the Brazilian Northeast during the 1600s, when slaves would flee from the Portuguese plantations and create their own villages, highlighting the Quilombo do Palmares' role in this process.

Plot

In a sugarcane plantation in Pernambuco, in the 17th century, Antão is a young a slave born in the below decks of a slave ship which brought his mother, a captive, to the Portuguese colony of Brazil. When he is older, he is told that his mother (who by then had already passed away) had been a queen, and that he was destined to become Ganga Zumba, African king. The wise and old slave Sororoba tells him also about Palmares, a free kingdom hidden in the hills and protected by the Orisha Oshosi, formed by runaway slaves.

Palmares' king, Zambi, who was in constant war against the whites, had just lost his son and, upon learning of Antão's existence, wanted him to become Palmares's new leader. Sorobaba and others prepared his escape with the help of a guide sent by Zambi, and, together with his lover Cipriana, he flees. While on the road, they are spotted by Portuguese landowners from a neighbouring farm, but they manage to kill them, except for the slave Dandara. When, however, they stumble upon the river that was the designated meeting place with Zambi's warriors, they find no one. Eventually, they manage to find Palmares where they receive a king's welcome, despite pursuit by the slave hunter Tolentino da Rosa.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The New York Times. MOVIE REVIEW Brazilian Slaves Flee in 'Ganga Zumba'. Thompson, Howard. January 21, 1972.
  2. Web site: Ganga Zumba.