For a brief period in the
early ’70s, actor Ossie Davis pursued a sideline career as a feature-film
director, generating a handful of socially conscious projects with questionable
storytelling and uneven performances. His behind-the-camera aptitude never
quite rose to the sophistication of his politics, but each of the features he
helmed is interesting to some degree. Arguably the most problematic of Davis’
directorial endeavors is Kongi’s Harvest,
the first movie ever made in Nigeria by a predominantly Nigerian crew. Adapted
from a significant play by Wole
Soyinka and completed in 1970, the film didn’t reach American screens until
1973, and one gets the impression lots of post-production tinkering happened
along the way.
As in Soyinka’s play, the story takes place in a fictional
African nation. Kongi (played by Soyinka) is a military strongman who seized
control in a coup, deposing beloved King Oba Danlola (Rasidi Onikoyi), whom
Kongi holds prisoner in a heavily guarded compound. As the occasion of an
important annual harvest festival nears, Kongi schemes to receive the gift of
the first yam, because doing so represents his ascension to the godlike status
of the nation’s rightful ruler. Naturally, King Oba and his supporters resist
Kongi’s plan, so as the story progresses, Kongi becomes more and more
unhinged—desperation compels him to blackmail King Oba by threatening mass
executions of political prisoners unless King Oba consents for Kongi to receive
the yam.
The intense narrative was particularly topical at the time the film
was made, and as the recent fall of Robert Mugabe indicates, it’s not as if the
blight of brutal dictatorships has left the African continent. Alas, good
intentions don’t always make for good movies, which is where Kongi’s Harvest hits difficulties. Davis
assembled a large cast of Nigerian actors for the movie, and some are smoother
on camera than others. Soyinka dominates, churning through maniacal lectures
and tantrums with such intensity that his passion for satirizing dictators is
palpable. Nonetheless, some of the Kongi scenes are so over-the-top as to seem
cartoonish, and Davis’ directorial hand isn’t sufficiently assured to fold
farcical elements into the bleak narrative. Occasionally, Kongi’s Harvest feels like a compendium of footage from two or
three different directors’ interpretations of the same material.
Not helping
matters are clumsy onscreen appearances by Davis, who shows up at random
intervals to deliver narration directly into the camera. (Davis also provides
the voice for a few news broadcasts and radio announcements.) Perhaps most
troubling of all is the ending, which is considerably different than that of
the original play—whereas the stage version ends on a note of grim absurdity,
Davis’ move signs off with something much more conventional and heavy-handed.
Kongi’s Harvest: FUNKY
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