Movies We Like: ‘Zulu’
by Kurt SchlichterThe members of the ruling class of the British Isles seem to be committed to demonstrating that they are nothing but hopeless neo-socialists busy sacrificing their green and pleasant land on the altar of nanny-state multiculturalism. It seems that every day there is a report of some new Labor assault on free speech, a fresh disaster in the decaying single-payer health care system, or another craven surrender to domestic jihadism. The latest atrocity is Scotland’s politicians’ ”compassionate release” of Lockerbie mass-murderer Abdulbaset al-Megrahi, a shameful maneuver that managed to combine greed, cowardice and self-righteousness all into one gutless package. I used to emphasize that I was 25% Scot and not mention my 12.5% French ancestry. Now? Well, can you say, “Bonjour?” At least the “frogs” leadership will take their own side in a fight.
But the people of the British Isles – the English, the Scots, the Welsh and the Irish – are a proud, tough bunch ill-served by their shabby politicians. And nowhere on screen can you see their heart and glory displayed better than in 1964’s war epic Zulu.
Understand that Zulu is a true story. In January 1879, a column of about 1500 poorly-deployed British troops was overrun at Isandhlwana by the 20,000-man Zulu army of King Catshweyo. After that slaughter – the Zulus did not bother with niceties like taking prisoners – the Zulus turned their attention to the nearby mission station at Rourke’s Drift, defended by about 100 Welsh infantrymen and their English officers. The desperate battle against overwhelming odds that followed became a legend.
Zulu is one of those films that just clicks. The story, of course, is compelling, but at the center are the characters. Stanley Baker, who also directed, plays Lieutenant Chard, the engineer who happened to be at Rourke’s Drift building a bridge when the Zulus arrived and who took charge of the defense. Baker’s subtle portrayal counterpoints the character’s tactical skill in planning the battle with his evident fear of failing his men.
Michael Caine made his starring debut as the second in command, the initially frivolous Lieutenant Gonville Bromhead, who resents the ranking Chard’s usurpation of his command but comes to respect and depend on him. Caine, a Korean War veteran, is fantastic – a nobleman at first more concerned with hunting and horsemanship than leading his men, but who also demonstrates bravery and aplomb under fire. And there’s a larger truth there about such men even today – for example, Prince Harry is a London party boy yet he pulled every one of his many strings to get himself sent into combat in Afghanistan.
Nor can you forget Nigel Greene as Color Sergeant Borne, the senior sergeant who holds the men together under fire. Throughout the film he is there squaring away the tommies – directing laggards to get back to work and insisting on buttoned tunics even in the unforgiving African sun. But during the battles, where the Zulus assault the depleted defenders, you see where his sergeant’s discipline comes into play as the Welshmen operate like a machine to hold off the advancing Zulu impis.
A word about the Zulus – they really are Zulus. The filmmakers showed them old cowboy movies to teach them how to act. Some of their death scenes are a bit, well, exaggerated, but when the camera shows them charging across the veldt at full speed, you get a good idea of what those redcoats felt. And make no mistake – Zulu properly honors and respects the courage of these African warriors. They were worthy and honorable opponents.
–
I first saw Zulu in the 70s on television and found it a rousing adventure. But as I grew up, and as I served as an officer myself, I came to appreciate its many layers. The characters are anything but cardboard cut-outs. Every one of them is an individual, with quirks, fears and the potential for heroism. The leaders are tough but fair, human but striving to meet their heavy responsibilities. These are the same qualities I saw in the best officers I’ve worked for.
One of my favorite scenes has an attached Boer officer explain to the Englishmen how the Zulus fight in a battle formation shaped like a cape buffalo with the “horns” seeking to encircle the enemy. Later, in the climactic battle, you see how Chard uses that knowledge to turn the tables on the Zulus by drawing their main attack into a kill zone where he concentrates his firepower using three ranks of volley-firing infantry and stops it cold. But the film does not hesitate to show the devastating consequences – or the effect that doing such violence has on good men faced with no alternative but to inflict it. There’s more maturity about the psychic cost of war in two minutes of Zulu than in a dozen unwatched and unwatchable anti-Iraq war flicks.
The visuals are stunning – Baker knew how to direct and the cinematography goes seamlessly from epic to intimate. The African location is almost a character itself. The sound and the music are equally critical. Listen to how the scattered rifle shots grow to a crescendo as the enemy closes in. Feel the heavy thud of the Zulus slamming their razor-sharp assegais against their cowhide shields in an attempt to unnerve the defenders. Shiver at the Zulu war song, which Ridley Scott mixed in with the German barbarian chants in the “Unleash hell!” battle scene at the beginning of Gladiator. Try not to get goosebumps as just prior to the final battle the Welshman respond to the Zulus’ song with a chorus of the tradition Welsh regiments’ song Men of Harlech:
Men of Harlech stop your dreaming
Can’t you see their spear points gleaming?
See their warrior pennants streaming
To this battlefield . . .
It’s a terrific scene that, with the battle that follows, truly demonstrates what it means to be a warrior. And you cannot overlook the John Barry score – it is both inspiring and ominous, and certainly one of the great movie themes of all time.
Zulu is a terrific movie, but its message is especially vital today. Zulu reflects the fighting spirit of the British peoples that still lives on despite all efforts to eradicate and emasculate it. Right now, United Kingdom units are doing some of the toughest fighting in Afghanistan. That includes 2 Rifles, the unit Big Hollywood contributor Michael Yon was embedded with until his reporting of their aggressive warrior esprit apparently offended their fainthearted civilian leaders back in London (This is my view, not necessarily Yon’s – I’ve never met the man and I do not speak for him). He covers Americans too, and if you want to feel some pride in our own warriors, check out Do Americans Care About British Soldiers?
If you have not yet read Yon’s reports Bad Medicine and the heartbreaking The Koop-Etchalls Effect, I have two questions:
1. Why not?
and
2. Why are you not reading them right now?
And when you do, drop something in his tip jar so Yon can keep up his awesome work. He’s completely reader supported and the mainstream media neither can nor will do what he does. I just hit the tip jar and I challenge you to do the same and then to put it into the comments to inspire others. Let’s see if together we can generate $500 so today’s British heroes don’t have to wait 85 years to see their story told.







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With that ending, it could not be done in a true story. It would have been a tough sale for a fictional story to end like that. (Since the author was so careful not to give it away, I won't either.)
only = not
DOH!
I appreciate that Larry. Somehow I've missed this movie and I've just put it to the top of the list on Netflix. I will now endeavor to avoid reading any comments on the movie until I can watch it!
Ah, yet another fantastic film I haven't seen in many years – so little time. I'll have to put it on my nigh endless to-watch list.
This movie is a classic. I bought the DVD years ago and feel compelled to throw it in the player a couple times every year.
I knew the German barbarian war chant in Gladiator sounded familiar…..
Great article about a great movie.
Kudos to Stanley Baker, Micheal Cain, Nigel Greene, and John Barry's musical scote, his best IMO.
One factual error, though, is the fact that Stanley Baker produced Zulu but Cy Endfield was the director.
Other another great film from the period (1960s) about the British Empire of the late 19th Century was Khartoum (1966), with a great screenplay and a standout performance by the great Charlto Heston.
The final battle always brings a tingle to my spine.
An under appreciated movie if there ever was one.
It's too bad that the English and Europeans have given away
their heritage with the inbridled immigration from the Middle East………
Oh well……I guess that us Yanks will keep the lights on for them………
They'll need a place to go soon.
Zulu is a nearly perfect film, one of my favorite films of all time, and one I have to watch (and force friends to watch — although the best of them always appreciate it after the fact) a few times each year.
Volley Fire by Rank!
One of my all time favorites.
Khartoum is one of my favorite films as well. Chinese Gordon comes across in all his glory and character.
I agree, Zulu was a great movie. Colour Sergean Borne has always been one of my favorite characters. The Victorian British Armies had a lot of good characters and warriors from Lord Roberts to Lord Wolseley to Chinese Gordon. I highly recommend the work of historian Byron Farwell, espeically Queen Victoria's Little Wars, if anyone is interested. Prince Harry has a special place in my heart because he typifies that tradition. Saturday Night Live can make fun of him all they want but he carries on a tradition centuries old..
Truly a Tremendous Film. I would also recommend Zulu Dawn. It's about the Battle of Isandlwana. It stars Burt Lancaster another goody. Put on your Pith Helmet your Red Coat and Fix Bayonets and Enjoy.
Not just a "based on a true story movie", the events of the battle are almost perfectly depected at the point and time of actual actions. The only weak point, probably because it would be unbeliveably perfect is that the real Pvt Hook was the exact opposite of the portrayal by James Booth as a malingerer and dispiser of authority.
How did this movie and historical event not make it on to my radar?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rourke%27s_drift
"But the people of the British Isles – the English, the Scots, the Welsh and the Irish – are a proud, tough bunch…"
Thank you for pointing out WHO the British really are. The British are NOT Indian, Pakistani, Caribbean, or otherwise "multicultural." And they're certainly not Muslims, subjet to Sharia law!
I'm putting "Zulu" in my Netflix queue!
Highly recommend it, you'll love this movie guaranteed.
In fact, the ending of the movie was somewhat fabricated. Read Donald Morris, "The Washing of the Spears", a very good, well researched book on the Zulu War.
"Ah, they got a fine bass section, but they got no top tenors."
Loved ZULU from the first time I saw it in the 60's, and it's on the top three of my Guy Movies list, between MAN WHO WOULD BE KING and SHE WORE A YELLOW RIBBON. For stirring depictions of the discipline and bravery of the Tommy, I also recommend THE FOUR FEATHERS–the 1930's version, not the last rendition, which is a politically correct POS.
Their politicians have given things away. My cousin Lionel, proud former member of the British armed forces tells me how things are over there and how many like him are not at all happy with the situation. He also knows he and his family are very welcome at my home should they need to start a new life.
"The Zulus were taking snuff and resting. They were equally exhausted and starved to boot. On the move continually since leaving Ulundi six days earlier, they …had last eaten on Monday…It was now Thursday morning…
"The fighting at Rourke's Drift had lasted more than ten hours, much of it in a frantic hand-to-hand struggle and all of it in the teeth of a withering fire that had more than decimated the impi.
"Dabulamanzi could ask no more of them;
"The spears had been washed, and for the moment there was no desire to renew the fight. After awhile the impi rose and trotted off to the drift, swinging wide around the wary outpost into the fields beyond the road.
"The men watched them stream by in grateful silence and then settled down to wait."
-Donald R. Morris, "The Washing of the Spears"
Not exactly up to the movie version. Sorry, guys, but I'm a history buff. I prefer the truth.
Military historian Victor Davis Hanson devotes a chapter to Isandlwana and Rourke's Drift in CARNAGE AND CULTURE, which argues that it is Western culture which drives Western military success, rather than technological expertise, which is a cultural by-product. Hanson argues that the greatest threat to our military superiority is from within the culture, as evidenced by the role of the MSM convincing Americans that the Tet Offensive in 1968 was a military defeat despite evidence that it was a total disaster for the Viet Cong.
Michael Yon is a modern day prose Rudyard Kipling, chronticling the daily grit and heroism of the extraordinary men and women of Coalition armed forces in Iraq and Afghanistan. It is impossible to read "The Koop-Etchalls Effect" without misting over. Thanks for the prompt–my donation to Michael is on its way.
In January 1879, a column of about 1500 poorly-deployed British troops was overrun at Isandhlwana by the 20,000-man Zulu army of King Catshweyo.
The British equivalent of our Little Big Horn 2 1/2yrs earlier, only in the Brit version the arrogant Chelmsford was not in the field to suffer the fate that befell his troops, vs the arrogant Custer falling at the hands of the Sioux.
History provides lessons.
The song "Men of Harlech" would have had a deeper meaning to British audiences in 1964. The song commemorates the seige of Harlech Castle in the 1400s. It is a call to arms, a vow to never give up the defense of the castle, and a pledge of death to its attackers.
I remember this movie airing on t.v. as a child.
Why?
Boobs.
Yup, hundreds and hundreds of bare breasted women running around right on the public airways during the after school hours.
Way better then the Munsters or even I Dream of Jeannie in her petite outfit.
Funny thing, the scenes were filmed in good old Georgia U.S.A. with American extras. . .
I spent the next few years eagerly awaiting a movie filmed with hundreds of topless California girls shown on t.v. – still waiting.
I guess these scenes have been edited out since then.
Still, it left an impression.
I too sensed a little hesitancy in the movie about whether the British were the actual heroes. Nothing actually stated but perhaps something left unsaid.
Is The Washing of the Spears a good book? I've seen it but never picked it up.
Great post about a great movie. One correction: Stanley Baker produced but did not direct. Cy Enfield did a magnificent job in that department.
When Obama won the election the first thing I said to my brother was "It's time to save the colors".. lol
One of my favorite films of all time. This was one of the films my dad insisted we watch as kids. In the family, it is a "family classic" (along with films of varying artistic merit, from "Bridge on the River Kwai," "High Noon," etc., to "Caddyshack" and "Strange Brew" – the last, I insist, *still* being the best adaptation of Hamlet ever). Just *reading* about the scene where the British soldiers sing in the face of the Zulu singing gives me chills. This movie, along with the highly fictitious, but still wildly entertaining, miniseries "Shaka Zulu" from the late 80's, was the reason I had an Africa/Asia/Islam emphasis in my history major.
If anyone hasn't seen this, don't rent it, buy it. You'll want to watch it over and over again. Even if only a few scenes. I, myself, usually skip over the "drunken pastor" scenes these days and keep to the fighting.
the sinner,
Patrick
Top-notch comments and the original 4-feathers was easily the best film of the decade.
As a aside, an interesting one, I hope, Harlech Castle provides the name 'Maid of Harlech' for a P-38 Lockheed Lightning discovered in 2007 off a beach in Wales, victim of a training accident in 1942. Very remarkably preserved, recovery arrangements, through the efforts of TIGHAR, The International Group for Historical Aircraft Recovery, are on-going.
http://www.tighar.org/Projects/P38/welshlightning...
Perhaps this health-care debacle will be our Rourke's Drift…
You know what I find interesting? If the crew and writers were socialists, they sure didn't do a great job showing what liberals today try to show: that all military men are drunken baby-killers. Having the Zulus salute the British soldiers the way they did shows the dignity of the soldiers on both sides and does anything but denigrate both the soldiers and soldiering, in general.
the sinner,
Patrick
"Remember the Alamo"
perhaps not…
But it did work dramatically- and, not having been there who's to say? Read 'Washing of the Spears' the best book on the English-Zulu Boer experience written. Very elucidating…
Great film. A yearly must see.
That's good and very befitting.
That is interesting. At least, to me. As mentioned above I'm a military history buff, and I had two uncles who served in the Army Air Corps/Force during WWII; one was a bombardier in B-17's over Europe and the other piloted transport aircraft over the Burma "Hump". One was shot down and sat out the war in a German P.O.W. camp, where he was treated quite humanely according to his own freely given testimony. That kind of blows our "evil Nazi" stereotypes, but the camp was run by Luftwaffe personnel, which we surmised made a big difference.
Anyway, it's hard to believe that fighter could lay off of a public beach for 65 years and not be seen.
Sigh. Never enter into a land war in Asia, and don't try to educate people on the internet…
No offense intended.
Actually, the Zulu impis were drunken babykillers. Talk about black-on-black violence. Holy cow. According to estimates, over a million people were slaughtered during Shaka's conquests of the neighboring tribes.
Uhhh…I'll be sure to check that one out…
Just finished re-reading THE MIGHTY EIGHTH for the umpteenth time, and the first-hand accounts from the kriegies, though stalag conditions were extreme and harsh, indicate they had much more to fear from German civilians executing them on the spot once they were on the ground.
One account relates escape attempts at Stalag Luft 1by tunneling – the Germans knew the digging was going on and let it go until the time the tunnel was nearly complete, and would 'swoop in and catch us.' Apparently there were little to no consequences for the attempts.
As a writer, it's always humbling to realize that one of the greatest movies ever made — Zulu, of course — has neither an identifiable plot (other than "they fight"), no character development (other than "he dies"), and about half a page total of dialogue (other than "FIRE!"). And it's AWESOME.
Never heard of this movie- but it's going on top of my Netflix queue. Sounds like my kind of show. As an aside, you mentioned Prince Harry- I'll give him and his brother props for serving their country in the war effort. Good for them.
Ah. So by your lights, what are Hanif Kureishi, Ben Kingsley, Naomi Campbell, Amir Khan, Dev Patel, and Michael Caine's wife and daughter, if not British?
This was my Dad's favorite movie. He would watch it every time it was on. It used to drive my Mom crazy, because she couldn't understand watching a movie more than once.
It is, as previously posters have noted, best to pair "Zulu Dawn" [chronologically first] and then "Zulu." The two movies contrast the strengths and weaknesses of the imperial British military.
And for eerily similar reasons- both suffered from arrogance, inadequate reconnaissance, and faulty cartridges (the early .45-70 was copper, the .45 Boxer of 'coiled' construction: both could rupture and jam in the breech.
Although it works great on screen, the patriotic Welshman Baker fudged facts a little bit. The 24th Foot was not a Welsh regiment in 1879, but rather the Second Warwickshire. It wouldn't become the South Wales Borderers until 1881 under the Childers re-organization.
Thanks that was a terrific read on Hook and the action he took and faced.
I love seeing this movie. Its probably one of my all time top five favorite war movies.
I can't truthfully say that this is one of my *favorite* movies, but its definatel one that I like. It tuck with me, the first time I saw it. Even before I knew the story of Rorke's Drift… Those scenes where the Redcoats formed rank and fired–that was some memorable stuff. Really made you feel the *power* of fighting that way.
post imperial is a tough place to be. they've screwed up a great heritage, wonder how they will recover.if they can.
as dalrymple said:not with a bang, but a whimper"….
Pity.
I remember when my late grandfather brought to see this movie. He was as inspired by it as I was. I'll never forget that time with him.
I've never seen Zulu, but The Man Who Would Be King rocked.
Michael Caine's the shiznit!
One note, the mission chaplain, far from being a drunkard, also won a decoration, He stayed for the whole battle, and gave first aid and passed out ammo.
OK, two notes, The Zulus retreated due to their scouts spying the relief column, as it were, just in time.
A magnificent film!
Excellent movie, though it couldn't hold a candle to Breaker Morant for drama and battle scenes. The Aussies one-upped their Brit counterparts!
http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=ZjkxY2VjNzM2...
Man I love that movie, thanks for the write up, I may go home and watch it again tonite, and yes I got the goosebumps!
An amazing movie about an amazing event! Oddly enough, I had a taste for a totally un-PC movie just this past weekend and pulled out my copy of Zulu. I have to admit that I also fast-forwarded through poor old Jack Hawkins' drunken pastor (so self-flagellating '60s), but even watching the movie for about the 25th time still gave me those old chills. Stanley Baker set out to laud the Welsh and did all of England proud. If they still had any sense of their own history, this movie should be required watching in British schools, but (alas) we can guess that won't happen.
Yes, a double-bill of this and The Alamo would be a great treat.
I actually teared up at the end of this last time I saw it. Of course, it's a guy thing.
Thank you for the great review of a movie I had somehow missed! I'm a huge fan of Michael Caine and Sean Connery in The Man Who Would Be King. ALSO, contributed $25 to the tip jar for Michael Yon. Fantastic reporting by Michael. Moving, heart wrenching. The best photo journalism around.
Your cousin and his family are most welcome at my place, as well.
Please thank him for his service for me.
Much appreciated my friend.
Thanks for the reference to "The Washing of the Spears." The chapter on "The Defense of Rourke's Drift" is rivieting. The entire book is a fine survey of British policy and actions in South Africa with many unforgettable characters such as Chelmsford, Buller, Shepstone and, of course, Chard and Bromhead. Think I'll pull it out tonight and read some of it.
I saw this movie in a drive-in as the second feature, when it was first released. It's held up well over the years.
"I spent the next few years eagerly awaiting a movie filmed with hundreds of topless California girls shown on t.v. – still waiting. "
You have to order those when the 1-800 number comes up. It's called "Girls Gone Wild"
I watch this movie EVERY January 23!
How is this film overlooked?!
Love it in every way!
Most certainly! I didn't mean to imply some sort of "purity as soldiers" for the Zulu impis. I only meant to say that if the crew were all "anti-war," that ending didn't exactly do their "cause" any justice. Again, I was an Asia/Africa/Islam emphasis in my history major. I am well aware of the brutality of the Zulus.
What else can you say about a people who use to execute prisoners/enemies of the state by shoving sharpened sticks up the rectum, if the sticks were big enough, simply impaling them or, if small enough, hanging the prisoner/enemy from a tree and letting them die slowly. Brutal doesn't even begin to cover the atrocities the Zulus committed in their wars of conquest (that lasted a lot longer than just under Shaka, though he started most of it).
Of course, one could say the same of any "idealized" view of "primitive peoples:" often, they were every bit as war-like and "bloodthirsty" as those eeeeeeeevil Europeans.
the sinner,
Patrick
That and (the original) "Brian's Song." It's ok for guys to cry at those movies.
the sinner,
Patrick
Zulu's don't look so tough…….
http://www.figo2009.org.za/photogallery/Culture/Z...
Witt, the missionary (who was portrayed incorrectly as a drunkard in the movie), didn't stay at Rorkes Drift and participate in the battle. He left for a nearby settlement where his family was prior to the battle.
Related story.
Cambridge student shopped by ex-girlfriend for stealing priceless Zulu pen
Last updated at 16:04 08 January 2008
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-506654/Ca...
one of the great unsung films- and one of our favourites…
Great points in an equally terrific post. The Battle at Rourke's Drift was the greatest triumph by a small number of troops over a massive enemy force in history- following the greatest triumph by a primitive force over Lord Chelmsford's technologically superior force 48 hrs earlier- the Zulu triumph over the British at Isandlawana.
Eleven Victoria crosses were issued, notably not one for Colour Seargeant Borne- what he did was considered routine for a British Sgt.- and the moment that Cetchwayo's men salute the 'Men of Harlick' for the bravery they showed sends chills up the spine- the bond warriors have for each other when you remove the politics of war from the actual fighting- is eloquent beyond words.
Truly great stuff, and a must see…
So, will there be a remake of this movie with Jude Law as Lt. Gonville Bromhead?
It is one on my favorite movies. I never got tired of seeing it on t.v. I had to go out and buy the dvd. This is one movie I hope Hollywood does not try to remake. Too bad Witt and Hook couldn't have been portrayed like real life, but I guess no movie can be 100%.
The "Men of Harlech" scene is my absolute favorite movie scene of all time. I'm aware of the liberties the film took with history, but I say, "print the legend" — it's a great picture. (BTW, another good book recommendation: "Queen Victoria's Little Wars" by Byron Farwell).
Kurt: I too, am a quarter Scots. Instead of dwelling on the appalling business of the last couple of weeks, I prefer to recall a story I read in the Telegraph in 2003. A platoon of the Argyll & Sutherlands were ambushed while on patrol. They FIXED BAYONETS (remember this was 2003, not 1803), charged and killed over a hundred of the SOBs.
Truly a Tremendous Film. I would also recommend Zulu Dawn. It's about the Battle of Isandlwana. It stars Burt Lancaster another goody. Put on your Pith Helmet your Red Coat and Fix Bayonets and Steady Men Steady.
A magnificient movie, but the interesting thing is: it wasn´t exactly made by conservatives. Cy Endfield had been blacklisted. Baker was a dedicated socialist. On the DVD audio commentary, the movie´s second unit director doesn´t mince words about his fellow filmmakers: "They were all communists".
But you don´t see it in the movie. There are some hints, perhaps: the drunken, useless priest (but then, I suppose they exist), the surgeon screaming at the officers ("Damn you butchers!") which I don´t think he would have done in 1879, the officers confessing to feel shame after the battle (I´d bet a week´s wages they felt elated to be alive).
My guess is that at the time the movie was made, the filmmakers had enough humility and professionalism as well as business sense not to turn an adventure movie into a personal statement. It is the humility that is lacking today.
Or maybe with the last war fresh in the memory they wouldn´t trample on the legacy of these soldiers. Though they didn´t do right by Henry Hook, who was a model soldier, see:
<a href=”http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_Henry_Hook” target=”_blank”>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_Henry_Hook
Except that "salute" never happened. Sorry. See my post below.
That's exactly what I did when I made a VHS copy, of the two, years ago.
It is well researched and very detailed. If you're interested in this period of history it's an excellent reference. The author also devotes quite a bit of time to the political climate and the reasons why the British were running around in Zulu territories in the first place, which makes you less sympathetic to the film.
Morris will never be confused with Bernard Cornwell as a storyteller, but he's a competent historian. Former Naval officer and CIA.
Also much like Custer, the British had no business being at Isandhlawana in the first place, as it was within the boundaries of the Zulus' deeded treaty lands. They went in specifically to provoke a military response, for political advantages. Be careful what you wish for…
I actually dreamed of Jeannie, though.
Hundreds of dancing Zulu tribeswomen, not so much…
Not that there's anything wrong with that. I was just never into the whole National Geographic thing. I was more the J.C. Penney's catalog kind of guy.
"Funny thing, the scenes were filmed in good old Georgia U.S.A. with American extras"
Um…no. Zulu was filmed in Africa with Zulu playing Zulu. Cetewayo was portrayed by his descendant, King Buthelezi.
The 700+ Zulu extras were largely descendants of the actual warriors who took part in the battle, among them the then chief of the Zulu Nation, Chief Mangosuthu Buthelezi, taking the role of his predecessor, Cetawayo."
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0058777/trivia
Given that the Zulus at Isandlawana lost between five and six thousand of their own killed or mortally wounded, while killing nine hundred British regulars and an attached battery of artillery and rockets, plus assorted native levies that couldn't outrun their Zulu opponents (several hundred did), Cetshwayo was quite right to mournfully say that an assegai had been thrust into the belly of his nation after that particular battle.
Great film. Needs a better DVD issue, however.
Witt, the missionary portrayed as a drunk in the film (which he was not), didn't stay for the battle much less win decorations. As the Zulus approached he left to be with his family which he had earlier sent away.
I'm unemployed at the moment, so could only toss in $20 to the Yon 'tip jar' (I swear, Michael, when I sell my first screenplay, you are going to get a LOT more!).
And 'Zulu' is one my all time favorites. I love it. Just love it. Thanks so much for alerting others to this awesome film.
Loved the movie. Anyone who wants to get a flavor of the British fighting during the late 1800's should read Winston Churchill' s book called The story of the Malakand Field force, an Episode of frontier war. The book was published in 1898 but is still available on Amazon. It reports a military action in the Swat valley of what is now Pakistan and the fighting described is amazingly similar to what our troups are now experiencing in Afghanistan and by the way does not offer much hope for our efforts in that country. It has many of the same actions that are depicted in Zulu movie and forces one to admire the "matter of factness" of fighting and dying these soldiers display in these far away lands.
I second the recommendation and would add Churchill's "My Early Life." Young Winston spent a lot of his time on there frontier battles as a soldier / journalist.
"Volley Fire by ranks! First Rank; Fire! Second Rank……"
gives me chills too.
I work for the guy that lead the team that recovered the P-38 "Glacier Girl" from under the ice in Greenland. They did a video on the recovery and restoration. They also have many pictures hung on the walls at work showing the recovery.
The man is a "Living Legend of Georgia Aviation" in the US.
It was buried under the sand ……a big storm's wave action carried the sand away last year……and viola a priceless piece of history was uncovered.
Absolutely correct, I believe it was the 1st combat bayonet change in the British Army since WWII (Or Korea?). Must have been a bit of a shock to see a bunch of screaming Scotsmen charging towards you with razor shap naked steel in their hands. Mind you it was probably a bit like Glasgow city centre on a Saturday night after the pubs turn out
"What else can you say about a people who use to execute prisoners/enemies of the state by shoving sharpened sticks up the rectum…"?
That was only because they hadn't yet thought of waterboarding.
@Kurt: Thank You SIr, for bringing attention to one of the finest and best of '60's cinema! This is right up there with Lawrence of Arabia, Dr. Strangelove, Fistful of $'s and In The Heat Of The Night as my top faves of that decade. And also thank you for pointing out the wonderful John Barry score. John Barry provided a great soundtrack of my youth with his stellar Connery Bond scores. Barry is a British Treasure.
Now what bugs me about your post? The fact that it reminded me that all we have is a lousy MGM transfer on DVD. At least its widescreen. I owned the Criterion Laser Disc back in the day and I wish they would renew that license and issue a stunning Blu-Ray of this great classic.
And your right Kurt, This is not only a 'Man's' film but one of the best 'true stories' ever told. I think the main theme of this story is Honor and Bravery on both sides of the fence.
The Zulu music throughout this film is complex and incredibly beautiful culminating in a final chant of respect sung by the Zulu to the British. The film reflects a rare TRUE nod to cultural equivalence.
Cy also contributed to the screenplay.
good reply…
Lord Chelmsford did not take the Zulu impis seriously; he felt his technological superiority adequate. Hubris, that. And, as such many perectly serviceable Martini-Henry rifles ended up in the hands of the force that advanced on Bromhead and Chard. However, the Zulu- much like the Germans at Bastogne- conducted a series of probing attacks and the firing lines of the Brits repelled them whereas a full out assault would have easily overrun the encampment. It happened at night as well- not during the day as the film showed. And Pvt Hook was a flat out hero, not the slaggard portrayed. Ultimately, one of the best and most realistic war films ever- it was shot within miles of the original location. We have an assegai laying around somewhere…
By the way, Cetshwayo was played by his grandson Magosuthu Buthelezi…
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