Roots (1977) USA
Roots Image Cover
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Director:Chomsky, Marvin J., Burton, LeVar, Cole, Olivia, Cumbuka, Ji-Tu, Erman, John, Greene, David, Morrow, Vic, Moses, Gilbert, Vereen, Ben
Studio:MDM Productions
Writer:Jason Paul Collum
Rating:5.1 (5 votes)
Date Added:2012-06-05
ASIN:085393745622
Genre:English films
IMDb:0329961
Duration:9:33:00
Languages:English
Subtitles:No subtitles
LAC code:300006853
DVD or VHS:DVD
Original:original
Chomsky, Marvin J., Burton, LeVar, Cole, Olivia, Cumbuka, Ji-Tu, Erman, John, Greene, David, Morrow, Vic, Moses, Gilbert, Vereen, Ben  ...  (Director)
Jason Paul Collum  ...  (Writer)
 
Julie King  ...  Professor Olivia Clark
Tina Ona Paukstelis  ...  Sissy
Matthew Winkler  ...  Will
Karen Dilloo  ...  Piper
Christopher D. Harder  ...  John
Sy Stevens  ...  Stephen
Darcey Vanderhoef  ...  Nancy
William Krekling  ...  Eddie
Tracey Pope-Stevens  ...  Priscilla
Brian Hansen  ...  Brian
Dennis Smart  ...  Keir
Tami Klamm  ...  Marian
Kip Keckler  ...  Matt
Dillon Mapel  ...  Cody
Kathleen Campeau  ...  Carrie (Will's Mom)
Comments: DEN 290
ROOTS: Discs 1 & 2

Summary: From the moment the young Kunta Kinte (LeVar Burton) is stolen from his life and ancestral home in 18th-century Africa and brought under inhumane conditions to be auctioned as a slave in America, a line is begun that leads from this most shameful chapter in U.S. history to the 20th-century author Alex Haley, a Kinte descendant. The late Haley's acclaimed book Roots was adapted into this six-volume television miniseries, which was a widely watched phenomenon in 1977. The programs cover several generations in the antebellum South and end with the story of "Chicken" George, a freed slave played by Ben Vereen whose family feels the agony of entrenched racism and learns to fight it. Between the lives of Kunta and George, we meet a number of memorable characters, black and white, and learn much about the emotional and physical torments of slavery, from beatings and rapes to the forced separation of spouses and families. Nothing like this had ever confronted so many mainstream Americans when the series was originally broadcast, and the extent to which the country was nudged a degree or two toward enlightenment was instantly obvious. Roots still has that ability to open one's eyes, and engage an audience in a sweeping, memorable drama at the same time. --Tom Keogh