Ship of shame
Spielberg's Amistad flogs slavery
by Peter Keough
AMISTAD. Directed by Steven Spielberg. Written by David Franzoni. With
Djimon Hounsou, Morgan Freeman, Matthew McConaughey, Anthony Hopkins, Stellan
Skarsgard, Nigel Hawthorne, David Paymer, and Anna Paquin. A DreamWorks
Pictures release. Opens Friday at the Opera House and Showcase cinemas (Warwick only).
There's no doubt about it: Steven Spielberg knows his way around the nightmare
of history. None of the prehistoric terrors of The Lost World can
match the harrowing images that are the heart of Amistad, a true tale of an
1839 mutiny on the title Spanish slave ship (whose name means "friendship"). In
a wordless flashback we are taken to the grotesque abominations of the "Middle
Passage," the transporting of hundreds of naked, kidnapped Africans heaped in
the hull of a Portuguese ship from their homeland to Cuba.
Leering slave traders randomly shoot and flog their helpless, terrified
victims. A woman gives birth in a mass of huddled humanity and the infant is
passed from hand to hand so it can be lifted to the open air; a few scenes
later, the mother slips over the ship's side into the sea, her child in her
arms. A sack of stones is shoved overboard, and 50 persons, chained to it,
follow. Those who survive the journey suffer the final indignation of being
scrubbed clean to be paraded before the auction block and the parasoled gentry
of Havana.
In its compressed intensity this segment eclipses even the relentless
barbarism of Schindler's List; if for no other reason, Amistad
deserves to be seen because it brings to life the obscenity of 400 years of
slavery with the immediacy of a whiplash. Unfortunately, or mercifully, that is
only 15 minutes in a two-and-a-half-hour movie. The rest is good-to-middling
courtroom drama, period playacting, and civics lesson, animated by perhaps two
Oscar-noteworthy performances.
The first is by Djimon Hounsou, who comes across as a force of nature as
Cinque, the determined leader of the revolt and the focus of the subsequent
trial. Captured with his fellows off the coast of Connecticut by the US Navy,
he displays a ferocity and a thirst for freedom that are frightening and
heartbreaking. Cinque's magnificent spirit notwithstanding, his fate and that
of the other mutineers will be determined in a mere property trial. Among other
suitors, 11-year-old Queen Isabella II of Spain (Anna Paquin, looking jaded and
coltish in her finery) seeks to regain what she regards as her country's
misappropriated goods.
On the Africans' side are two abolitionists out to advance their cause:
Theodore Joadson (Morgan Freeman, vacantly distinguished), an ex-slave, and
Lewis Tappan (Stellan Skarsgård in a footnote of a role), a wealthy
merchant. To put forward their case they call on that venerable curmudgeon and
human-rights advocate, ex-president John Quincy Adams (Anthony Hopkins as a
crusty Yankee curio who any minute you expect to say, "Pepperidge Fahm
remembahs!"). Rejected by Adams, they turn to shady real-estate lawyer Roger
Baldwin (Matthew McConaughey).
It's a good choice. His matinee looks rendered weasly by rimless spectacles
and chin whiskers, McConaughey becomes an engaging study in good-natured
self-interest; it's his best performance to date. Baldwin hopes to gain his
clients' release through a technicality -- since only those born slaves can be
considered as such, if he can prove the Amistad's cargo originated in
Africa instead of Cuba, they are free men and their revolt against their
captors is justified. In the course of preparing the case he learns Cinque's
story, and the two grow testily close in the film's only example of character
development.
That relationship becomes secondary to more pompous designs. Baldwin's
strategy succeeds at the initial hearing, but higher forces are at work.
President Martin Van Buren (Nigel Hawthorne) intervenes, partly to subdue
rumblings of Civil War, but mostly to garner Southern votes in the upcoming
election. As the case heads for the Supreme Court, the Amistad defense
team prevails on the tiresome Adams, and all is neatly rapped up in a
platitudinous speech and epilogue.
Which is a pity, because in addition to the slave-ship sequence Amistad
shudders with images of disturbing genius, all shot by Janusz Kaminski in a
monochromatic palette as stark as iron fetters. In a surreal moment, the newly
liberated vessel passes within arm's length of another ship emerging from the
mist, a ship where the passengers revel in fine dining and a string quartet. A
vignette on cross-cultural communication almost emerges as Baldwin and company
try to find someone who speaks Cinque's language by walking through the streets
of New Haven counting to 10 in the prisoner's native Mandé. And few
scenes in recent cinema pack the primal power of a tormented Cinque as he
defies the court by repeatedly crying out, "Give us free!"
As was ultimately the case in Schindler's List, however, Spielberg's
retort to the brutal crimes of history is glib, crowd-pleasing sentimentality.
A passage in which a prisoner ponders illustrations in the New Testament while
a judge ponders his verdict in a chapel would embarrass Harriet Beecher Stowe.
And the metaphor of Adams nurturing the rose of freedom in his New England
hothouse gets overripe fast. To his credit Spielberg has reopened the wound of
this nation's greatest shame; the inadequacy of his efforts to bind it testify
to its depth and virulence.