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The Last King of Scotland (2006)

Director: Kevin Macdonald

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1 review

Synopsis

A Scottish doctor travels to Africa and soon finds himself working for the brutal dictator Idi Amin.

Movie review

From Time Out London

If ever there was a film that lives and dies with its lead actor, it’s this one. Forest Whitaker gives a terrific, ambiguous performance as Idi Amin, the army commander in post-colonial Uganda who seized power from President Milton Obote in a military coup in 1971 and who spent the next eight years amusing the world with his bullish and bizarre rhetoric, from awarding himself a CBE to claiming kingship rights to Scotland. But with Amin’s headline-grabbing, near-comic banter came a rule of terror, expulsion and murder that was peculiarly coloured by the many years Amin served in the British imperial army. The complexity is there for a dramatist to mine, and unsurprisingly there have been other films about Amin, including two quick-to-screen TV movies, ‘Raid on Entebbe’ and ‘Victory at Entebbe’ (both 1976) that reacted to the Israeli commando attack on Kampala’s airport in 1976, and the fascinating 1974 documentary by Barbet Schroeder, ‘Général Idi Amin Dada: Autoportrait’, which instigated the taking of French hostages in Kampala until Schroeder made cuts demanded by Amin.

But Kevin Macdonald’s debut fiction feature, as partly scripted by faction scribe du jour Peter Morgan (‘The Queen’), is the first to enjoy the benefit of reflection and hindsight and, importantly, to be made in Uganda. It’s a wise decision that allows cinematographer Anthony Dod Mantle – who shoots partly on colour-rich 16mm – to make the most of the country’s period architecture, red soils, lush vegetation and local extras, lending the film a welcome lack of distance or classical sombreness.

What emerges is a curious, not wholly successful but still smartly conceived blend of fact and fiction – as first imagined by the source novelist Giles Foden. We begin in Scotland in 1971, where the entirely made-up Nicholas Garrigan (James McAvoy) has graduated with a medical degree and spins a globe to plan his escape from a life as a suburban Scottish GP. He – or luck – opts for Uganda where, as fate would have it, Amin assumes power soon after Garrigan’s arrival and an encounter between the two men allows the young Scot the opportunity to become personal physician to the president. It’s a job he accepts with the sort of blank, excitable grin that becomes more annoying the more McAvoy sports it: his incredulity itself is incredulous. Surely ‘as green as a Garrigan’ must now enter the lexicon as a by-phrase for chronic naivety?

We’re used to being led through African stories by white hands, like European or American tourists on safari: John Hurt did the job in ‘Shooting Dogs’; Rachel Weisz and Ralph Fiennes assumed the honour in ‘The Constant Gardener’; and, next month, Leonardo DiCaprio will do the same in ‘Blood Diamond’. Thankfully the same device here offers something more than a safe path through unfamiliar territory. Amin had aspirations towards a perverted idea of Britishness; British journalists indulged the humour in Amin’s charming behaviour; and Amin even employed a British businessman, Bob Astles, as a close adviser. In that sense, the character of Garrigan, who fucks and fiddles while Kampala burns, is a clever device that implicates our enjoyment of Whitaker’s performance and of Idi’s playboy home life – the parties, the 1970s gear, the bluesy music – with the sinister real reasons for the smoke that billows on the horizon. True violence only comes very late, but when it arrives it’s stark and unrestrained, and focused intensely on two gruesome incidents that have enormous power.

Still, Garrigan’s naivety, reckless enjoyment of the spoils of an ill state and late awakening to the truth about Amin are sometimes hard to swallow. It’s the wily, whispered chats of a British foreign office stooge played superbly by a noxious Simon McBurney that are more sinister and instructive of the tightrope walked by Europeans in 1970s Uganda. It’s a shame, too, that the brutal power of Whitaker’s performance is allowed to fade away in the film’s closing moments in favour of a not-very-thrilling escape sequence where all the emphasis is on Garrigan rather than Amin or Uganda. That said, Macdonald’s first attempt at drama after the documentaries ‘One Day in September’ and ‘Touching the Void’ must mostly be considered a rousing success – and Whitaker’s performance alone is a triumph.

Author: Dave Calhoun 2006-10-17 14:58:26

Time Out London Issue 1887: October 18-25 2006


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User reviews of this film

  • Emily said...
    Posted on Jul 18 2009 22:13 Very good film, leading you into darkness of a madman's world which was Uganda's reality in 1971-1978... Important subject - it's the real story to remember and be warned.
    I thought it would be something more entertaining, but still is absorbing, mainly thanks to the Forest Whitaker's fantastic performance, he's such a talented actor!...
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