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Tamango

  • 1958
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
472
YOUR RATING
Alex Cressan, Dorothy Dandridge, and Curd Jürgens in Tamango (1958)
FrenchAdventureDramaHistory

A Dutch slave captain, on a voyage to Cuba, faces a revolt fomented by a newly captured African slave, Tamango. The slaves capture the captain's mistress, forcing a showdown.A Dutch slave captain, on a voyage to Cuba, faces a revolt fomented by a newly captured African slave, Tamango. The slaves capture the captain's mistress, forcing a showdown.A Dutch slave captain, on a voyage to Cuba, faces a revolt fomented by a newly captured African slave, Tamango. The slaves capture the captain's mistress, forcing a showdown.

  • Director
    • John Berry
  • Writers
    • Prosper Mérimée
    • John Berry
    • Lee Gold
  • Stars
    • Dorothy Dandridge
    • Curd Jürgens
    • Jean Servais
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    472
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • John Berry
    • Writers
      • Prosper Mérimée
      • John Berry
      • Lee Gold
    • Stars
      • Dorothy Dandridge
      • Curd Jürgens
      • Jean Servais
    • 17User reviews
    • 11Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos52

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    Top Cast23

    Edit
    Dorothy Dandridge
    Dorothy Dandridge
    • Aïché - la maîtresse de Reinker…
    Curd Jürgens
    Curd Jürgens
    • Le commandant John Reinker…
    Jean Servais
    Jean Servais
    • La docteur Corot…
    Alex Cressan
    Alex Cressan
    • Tamango
    Roger Hanin
    Roger Hanin
    • Bébé - Le maitre d'équipage…
    Guy Mairesse
    • Werner
    Julien Verdier
    Julien Verdier
    • Fernando
    René Hell
    René Hell
    • Le vieux marin
    Hassane Fall
    Hassane Fall
    Ababacar Samb-Makharam
      Cissé Karamoko
        Samuel M'Bondi
        Douta Seck
        • L'esclave guerrier…
        Bouraïma Damz
        • L'épouse esclave…
        Gil Lator
        Yves Eboué
        Berthe Vitalien
        Clément Harari
        Clément Harari
        • Le cuisinier…
        • Director
          • John Berry
        • Writers
          • Prosper Mérimée
          • John Berry
          • Lee Gold
        • All cast & crew
        • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

        User reviews17

        6.5472
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        Featured reviews

        7planktonrules

        Very good...but the vague ending might put off some.

        "Tamango" is a film which surprised me, as I didn't expect to see such a strong film back in 1958. After all, in some parts of the USA, even in 1958, they would have hesitated to show a film where black men fight and kill their oppressors. It's a shame, as it's a dandy film.

        The story begins in West Africa. A tribe is selling their conquered foes to a Dutch slaver (Curd Jurgens). However, among the slaves is a warrior...who also is a charismatic leader. He's determined NOT to make it to where ever the boat is headed and he insists on freeing himself from bondage. Eventually, he and his co-conspirators rise up against the crew and fight for their freedom.

        The film is not perfect. I think it actually made the slave ship seem NICE compared to how hellish such boats often were. The same with the cruelty. While severe, I am sure many slave ships treated their 'cargo' much worse. But on the other hand, it's a strong indictment against this evil and is a great film about the human spirit. Well worth seeing...even if the ending is a bit weak.
        7goleafsgo27

        A very bold effort for its era

        I was quite impressed with this film, mostly for the incredible strides forward it made in portraying the horrors of the slave trade and horrific abuse of the kidnapped and enslaved Africans. The epic miniseries Roots, two decades later, and Spielberg's Amistad some 40 years after this film offer more detail and arguably higher production values, but Tamango is well worth watching, especially for those keen on either film or world history. Like another reviewer, I found the acting a little flat, despite the presence of the talented Curd Jurgens and Dorothy Dandridge. But the performances of all were engaging enough for me to want to stick with it to see the resolution of the conflicts. I was also very impressed to see the relationship between CJ's and DD's characters, at a time in the US when white mobs were trying to prevent children of different colors from going to school together, and a decade before the US Loving case forced states to accept marriages between people of different colors.
        8EdgarST

        Mutiny on the Esperanza

        When I was 7 years old I saw the ads of «Tamango» in the press and posters in cinemas as I passed them by, but when I was old enough to see it (it was classified "for adults only") it had vanished from sight. Now that I finally watched it, when it was finished I was in awe. What a good film! Of course it does help that the final 10 minutes are simultaneously tense and poetic leading to a highly dramatic ending. But six decades after its original release, it is still a motion picture of strong content and great visual impact (although the copy I saw is not in the original 2.35:1 aspect ratio and the colors have faded).

        Released in 1958 it is an adaptation of Prosper Mérimée's 1829 homonymous novella (before he wrote his most famous «Carmen»). Significant changes were made for this screen version, but the final plot is also set in the early 19th century. In the coast of Guinea, warrior Tamango (Alex Cressan) and a sizable group of men and women have been sold to Reinker, a Dutch slave trader (Curt Jürgens) and they board the ship Esperanza that sets sails to Cuba, where they will be sold again, this time in the slave market. On route the violent conflict between the Caucasian sailors and the black slaves intensifies, the interracial sexual liaison between Reinker and a beautiful African woman named Ayché (Dorothy Dandridge) breaks, and Tamango leads a mutiny against the slavers.

        In the final script that went through significant re-writing due to Dandridge's insistence (who also refused to wear costumes that were offensive to the African woman, as designed by a Parisian designer), Ayché and Tamango are no longer lovers, he does not sell her but the two are victimized, and instead of surviving in Kingston the warrior fights until the end. These script changes turn Tamango and Ayché into icons of racial struggle, while the sincere, intense passion Reinker feels for Ayché is one of the first screen recognitions of many Europeans' love or lust for Africans.

        In the time it was made «Tamango» must have been some kind of a political and educational «audiovisual pamphlet», invaluable for those who were involved in the fight for the civil rights of Afro-descendants in the United States and elsewhere. No wonder it was banned in a few countries, and surely not only for the Reinker-Ayché relationship.

        I first saw the English-dubbed version: it becomes a bit hard in the first scenes to accept Dandridge as an African girl, with her American accent, but one gets used to it and thankfully she only has the necessary dialogue. Cressan, a medical student from Martinique that only made this film, is a magnificent emblem of African male beauty; and Jürgens, as usual, is fine as the villain with a soft heart.

        Director Berry was black-listed during the witch-hunting craze led by Senator Joseph McCarthy, and, after directing the cult film «He Ran All the Way», he went to Europe as Joseph Losey, Cy Endfield, Charles Chaplin, and others did. Berry also directed the romantic comedy «Claudine» about a couple of African-American workers, but he remained in France until his death.
        7goblinhairedguy

        Factually based tale of slave revolt

        "Tamango" is a rousing and intelligent tale of a slave ship revolt in the 18th century. It strives to avoid transparent moralizing and overt stereotypes, particularly by placing the gorgeous Dorothy Dandridge in the pivotal role of the Captain's mistress. She must decide whether to send him to his certain demise among her fellow Africans (as Leonard Maltin avers, it's way ahead of its time). Perhaps this even-handedness is not all that surprising given the fact that it was directed by the blacklisted John Berry, who found refuge in France after helming several sensitive films noirs about the urban American underclass.

        Most references give the film's literary source as a novella by French author Prosper Merimée. However, I recently stumbled upon an article in the "New York Times" (August 24, 2005) concerning a South African archaeologist who is combing a beach off Cape Horn for the wreck of a Dutch slave ship named the Meermin. The history given of this particular ship is pretty much a blow-by-blow description of this film (apart from the miscegenation), even down to the very details of how the slaves were given their chance, and how the surviving crew foiled them at one point. I can't remember if the film acknowledges any true-to-life origins, but this shivery narrative certainly lends the movie even more credence.
        8SnoopyStyle

        ahead of its time

        Captain Reiker (Curd Jürgens) loads a new shipment of slaves destine for Cuba. Tamango (Alex Cressan), the lion hunter, tries to lead a revolt but most slaves are only farmers. Aiché (Dorothy Dandridge) is a slave owned by the Captain. Doctor Corot (Jean Servais) is a Frenchman conflicted about slavery.

        It's a black empowerment movie. There is a fascinating scene with Reiker haggling with the chief over his payment. The actors are all terrific. I do question about escaping into the cargo hold. If there are fewer escaped slaves, then a quick retreat may make more sense. While the final ending makes poetic sense, it's not the most action-filled possible. Aiché is still great and her decision is extremely powerful. The most impressive part may be when this movie was released. It's in the era of Sydney Poitier, the heroic but non-threatening black. This is different and that's great.

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        Related interests

        Jean-Pierre Léaud in The 400 Blows (1959)
        French
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        Adventure
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        Drama
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        History

        Storyline

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        Did you know

        Edit
        • Trivia
          At initial release, depiction of interracial romance caused the film to be banned in the United States and in the French colonies.
        • Quotes

          Tamango: He will never make me a slave.

        • Connections
          Featured in Biography: Dorothy Dandridge: Little Girl Lost (1999)

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        Details

        Edit
        • Release date
          • January 24, 1958 (France)
        • Countries of origin
          • France
          • Italy
        • Language
          • French
        • Also known as
          • Die schwarze Sklavin
        • Filming locations
          • Studios de la Victorine - 16 avenue Edoard Grinda, Nice, Alpes-Maritimes, France(Studio)
        • Production companies
          • CEI Incom
          • Centre national du cinéma et de l'image animée (CNC)
          • Da.Ma. Cinematografica
        • See more company credits at IMDbPro

        Tech specs

        Edit
        • Runtime
          • 1h 38m(98 min)
        • Aspect ratio
          • 2.35 : 1

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