End of the Dialogue (1970)

44m
Running Time

February 1, 1970
Release Date

End of the Dialogue (1970)

44m
Running Time

February 1, 1970
Release Date

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Network & Production Companies
Morena Films

Plot.

The first film to ever show what life was in South-Africa under the Apartheid state. The film was released as an anonymous production under the aegis of the Pan Africanist Congress in 1970.

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This Movie Is About.

Details.

Release Date
February 1, 1970

Original Name
Phela-ndaba

Status
Released

Running Time
44m

Genres

Wiki.

End of the Dialogue (Phelandaba) is a 1970 documentary film made by five black South African expatriate members of the Pan-Africanist Congress and London film students who wanted to document Apartheid in South Africa. Because of South Africa's restrictive laws governing what could be photographed, the film had to be shot clandestinely and smuggled out of the country. It was edited and released in England.

The film caused an uproar when it was originally released in 1970. It was released worldwide and also screened on television in many countries, including the U.S., U.K. and New Zealand. The film is valuable as not only a record of history, but also a record of how little the outside world understood about what was happening in apartheid South Africa. The London Observer called it, "the most successful act of clandestine subversion against apartheid for years."

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