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Roots

  • Mini-série télévisée
  • 1977
  • PG
  • 1h 14m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
8,4/10
20 k
MA NOTE
POPULARITÉ
1 873
18
Roots (1977)
Home Video Trailer from Warner Home Video
Liretrailer1:28
3 vidéos
99+ photos
BiographieDrameGuerreHistorique

Une mise en scène de la lignée familiale de l'auteur, de l'esclavage de son ancêtre Kunta Kinte à la libération de ses descendants.Une mise en scène de la lignée familiale de l'auteur, de l'esclavage de son ancêtre Kunta Kinte à la libération de ses descendants.Une mise en scène de la lignée familiale de l'auteur, de l'esclavage de son ancêtre Kunta Kinte à la libération de ses descendants.

  • Vedettes
    • LeVar Burton
    • Robert Reed
    • John Amos
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    8,4/10
    20 k
    MA NOTE
    POPULARITÉ
    1 873
    18
    • Vedettes
      • LeVar Burton
      • Robert Reed
      • John Amos
    • 79Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 10Commentaires de critiques
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
    • A remporté 9 prix Primetime Emmy
      • 17 victoires et 35 nominations au total

    Épisodes8

    Parcourir les épisodes
    HautLes mieux cotés1 saison1977

    Vidéos3

    Roots: 30th Anniversary Special Edition
    Trailer 1:28
    Roots: 30th Anniversary Special Edition
    Roots: 30th Anniversary Special Edition
    Trailer 1:28
    Roots: 30th Anniversary Special Edition
    Roots: 30th Anniversary Special Edition
    Trailer 1:28
    Roots: 30th Anniversary Special Edition
    Roots So Deep
    Trailer 3:16
    Roots So Deep

    Photos130

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    Distribution principale91

    Modifier
    LeVar Burton
    LeVar Burton
    • Kunta Kinte…
    • 1977
    Robert Reed
    Robert Reed
    • Dr. William Reynolds
    • 1977
    John Amos
    John Amos
    • Older Kunta Kinte…
    • 1977
    Louis Gossett Jr.
    Louis Gossett Jr.
    • Fiddler
    • 1977
    Lynda Day George
    Lynda Day George
    • Mrs. Reynolds
    • 1977
    Olivia Cole
    Olivia Cole
    • Mathilda…
    • 1977
    Madge Sinclair
    Madge Sinclair
    • Bell Reynolds
    • 1977
    Ben Vereen
    Ben Vereen
    • Chicken George Moore
    • 1977
    Leslie Uggams
    Leslie Uggams
    • Kizzy Reynolds…
    • 1977
    Lloyd Bridges
    Lloyd Bridges
    • Evan Brent
    • 1977
    Chuck Connors
    Chuck Connors
    • Tom Moore
    • 1977
    Georg Stanford Brown
    Georg Stanford Brown
    • Tom Harvey
    • 1977
    Lorne Greene
    Lorne Greene
    • John Reynolds
    • 1977
    Ralph Waite
    Ralph Waite
    • Slater
    • 1977
    Sandy Duncan
    Sandy Duncan
    • Missy Anne Reynolds
    • 1977
    Brad Davis
    Brad Davis
    • Old George
    • 1977
    Lawrence Hilton-Jacobs
    Lawrence Hilton-Jacobs
    • Noah
    • 1977
    Edward Asner
    Edward Asner
    • Capt. Thomas Davies
    • 1977
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs79

    8,419.8K
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    Avis en vedette

    sbrnnxn

    I understand it now that I'm older

    In 1977 I was 10 years old, and all I remember is the majority of the city where I live was watching Roots each day for a week. I recently bought the video and watched it with my now 10 year old son, who is Black and I show him the importance of getting an education because our ancestors weren't allowed such luxuries. At his age everything is rosy just like it was when I was 10, but hopefully he can reflect back on this movie to motivate him in the future.

    Great cast of characters-even though I didn't realize that O.J. Simpson was in it! John Amos was the best and the funniest especially when he kept losing his character's African accent and sounding more like "James" on Good Times! Overall the movie is very touching and will have you experiencing mixed emotions if you're of the Black race, and have compassion if you're of other races that haven't experienced such things. I highly recommend this film and a book called the Miseducation of the Negro as Black family heirlooms-or for anyone who wants to be enlightened concerning a portion of Black history.
    9mts43

    Still the most important miniseries in the history of television.

    All my life I have heard the same old "smoke screens" every time something happens to expose the history of racism in this country that they don't want to acknowledge. That is the case with "Roots", and all the rationalizations used by these people to try and denigrate the story's impact. It does not change the fact that racism is "as American as apple pie". But these people never give up. It has been over 40 years since "Roots", and while things may have improved, we still have a long, long, long, long way to go.
    egomez

    the greatest mini series ever!!!!!!

    I was just a kid when I first saw this mini series and it taught me people used to enslave each other no many time ago. It taught me you never have to give up, it taught me many things, that had shaped my life on many ways. I'll never forget it...
    Mrj72188

    EXTRAORDINARY PIECE OF HISTORY AND DRAMA

    I first became interested in Roots when I heard about it on the Disney Channel movie "The Color of Friendship" in 2001. The next time it resurfaced was in Jan. 2002, when Hallmark was going to reair it. Rather than wait (and waste tape) for every night, I bought it on DVD. It is amazing how the crew acheived the dream of Alex Haley's ancestors horrid past, from slave capture to auction, to escape to crippling, to being sold and death. The one thing that shocked me the most was how the KKK was involved in that family's life. When there were funny moments, I laughed and when there were sad moments, I wept. To sum it up: Roots is a masterful miniseries that no family should be without.
    10classicalsteve

    The Best TV Miniseries Ever Offered by a Major Commercial Network Before Cable

    Two of the most important American television programs are "The Civil War" by Ken Burns (1989), and the epic narrative miniseries "Roots" (1977) based on the book "Roots: The Saga of an American Family" by Alex Haley. Despite the controversy surrounding the book, and the facts of Haley's ancestry (for example, the slave Toby aka "Kunte Kinte", may never have fathered Kizzy and therefore may not be a direct ancestor of Haley) the series is an important and ground-breaking work in its stunning portrayal of slave life in America from the late 18th century to the mid-19th century.

    For decades, the United States has been largely in denial of its treatment of African-Americans both as slaves and later in post-Civil War periods. The south of the 19th century had fabricated the reality of slave conditions and down-played the brutality inflicted on both slaves and anti-slave sympathizers. Racial hatred and brutality continued into the 20th century, largely fueled by white traditions that have (and continue to) concoct misrepresentations of historical reality to younger generations. By the middle of the 20th century, nearly 100 years after the end of the American Civil War, President Johnson signed Civil Rights legislation into law with the White Southern community kicking and screaming all the way. If legislation couldn't change people's hearts and minds, what could?

    Americans love movies, story-telling/narrative film depictions of reality. There had never before been a nationally distributed film production that honestly told the story of the African-American slave experience. Fourteen years after Johnson's legislation, "Roots" was broadcast on national television by the American Broadcasting Company (ABC). I regard those network executives that green-lighted the broadcast in great esteem for their willingness to take a chance on this most-important series. I doubt whether US commercial television will ever produce and broadcast such a high-caliber and controversial program again in the near future. And to give credit to the American viewing public, "Roots" was a huge success.

    From beginning to end, "Roots" is an absolute triumph of film production, the best-ever miniseries offered by a corporate network prior to the rise of cable television. The acting and the script are top-notch. Almost every notable African-American acting talent of the time was solicited to join the cast, from LeVar Burton and John Amos (Kunte Kinte, Toby) to Lou Gosset Jr (Fiddler) to Ben Vareen (Chicken George) to James Earl Jones (Alex Haley). Even OJ Simpson makes an appearance. A lot of notable white talent appears as well, such as Ed Asner and Sandy Duncan.

    Slavery is a tragedy and "Roots" is a tragic story. "Roots" has its light moments, its inspiring moments, although it is its heartbreaking moments that stay with you: The moment the young African Kunte Kinte is shackled, sold as chattel and forced to board the slave ship bound for America. The whipping of the young Kunte Kinte to "break" him into slavery. The selling of Kizzy, Toby's daughter, to another slave master because of her involvement with a scheme to help a runaway. These are the moments that make Roots' larger point. Another aspect that makes Roots effective in its rhetoric is that it never seeps into sentimentality to makes its point. The story relies on an honest narrative and the audience is left to draw their on conclusions. Is it brutal? Yes. Unjust? Definitely. And that is what it was. (If you don't believe "Roots", sell yourself into slavery and see how you like it.)

    Two aspects occur to me about what this story means beyond just the plain inhumanity of the institution of slavery. One aspect is that the benefit of slavery is terribly minute when compared to the staggering price paid by the slaves themselves and everyone else. Simultaneously, non-slaves were pressed into service to maintain slavery as an institution. Such titanic sadness, misery, hopelessness brutality, and inhumanity is forced upon people (both slave and non-slave) in return for a more comfortable life for a minuscule segment of the population. And yet the amount of work, effort, and money to maintain the inhumane infrastructure seems more burdensome than if these people were free. The average white southerner could not afford to own slaves, and many worked for slave owners as overseers, slave-catchers, auctioneers, and other positions designed to maintain the institution. In short, misery for thousands with a little comfort for a few.

    The other tragedy is the denial of positive contribution to society. Those who were slaves were denied giving their love, their knowledge, their inspiration, and their culture to society. All this beauty sacrificed so a few white aristocrats can laze around on sofas in front of fireplaces in giant mansions. Someone once said that if we don't help foster the gifts in other people, we run the risk of never seeing how our world could be made better. Slavery is a tragedy for the people enacting it as well, although the suffering aspect is less apparent.

    "Roots" is a story that needs to be told and retold. Shown and re-shown. I would encourage any teacher trying to convey the reality of slavery in America to consider showing at least a segment or two of "Roots". There is no question that the film is mesmerizing. It saddens me that there are still those in America that want to hang onto southern myths that propagate that slavery wasn't that bad. These are some of the same people that are convinced the holocaust is a fabrication. It is better to forgive than the forget. We have to embrace our roots.

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    Historique

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      When ABC programmed it to air on several consecutive nights in primetime, it was considered a revolutionary approach to programming a miniseries. Most were aired once or twice a week over several weeks. Several years later, the network revealed that it was aired that way to get the show "out of the way" in a hurry. The network felt that nobody would watch the story if it aired over a longer period of time.
    • Gaffes
      Kizzy, a slave who works in the fields, has long, beautifully manicured fingernails.
    • Citations

      Omoro, Kunta's father: [holding his infant son up to starry sky] Kunta Kinte, behold the only thing greater than yourself!

    • Autres versions
      The original version of Roots on ABC featured slightly different opening titles. The Roots Mural was the same, but when the title Roots was shown on-screen it was over a dark blue background. The cover of the novel rises up from a horizontal to a vertical position. The screen says "AN ABC NOVEL FOR TELEVISION ALEX HALEY'S ROOTS THE SAGA OF AN AMERICAN FAMILY." Current VHS, dvd, and re-broadcasts simply have "Roots" on a black background, without the other information. Also, the end credits have been changed considerably. In the original, there were eight sets of end credits (one for each episode.) When the show was re-edited to six episodes, names were combined for different hours and some of the end credit sequences (with a still from that episode) are missing, including one featuring Kizzy and Missy Anne having a picnic.
    • Connexions
      Featured in The 29th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (1977)
    • Bandes originales
      Oluwa
      by Quincy Jones

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    FAQ18

    • How many seasons does Roots have?Propulsé par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 23 janvier 1977 (Canada)
    • Pays d’origine
      • United States
    • Langue
      • English
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Raíces
    • Lieux de tournage
      • St. Simons Island, Géorgie, États-Unis
    • sociétés de production
      • David L. Wolper Productions
      • Warner Bros. Television
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 14m(74 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.33 : 1

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