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Last Grave at Dimbaza

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Wikipedia article




'Last Grave at Dimbaza' is a 1974 documentary film made by South African expatriates and British 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, where it was edited and released in England.[http://icarusfilms.com/new2006/dimb.html "Last Grave at Dimbaza," Icarus Films (accessed 6 February 2016).]

The film won the Grand Prix award for Short Film at the Melbourne International Film Festival in 1975.

The film highlighted the disparity in living conditions between white and black people in South Africa, revealing that this has been enshrined in numerous South African laws. While white people enjoyed one of the highest standards of living in the world, the lives of black people were carefully circumscribed so that they enjoyed few rights with no legal recourse. Most lived in poverty.As stated in the film.

When the film was released, it resulted in international condemnation of the Apartheid government's brutal resettlement policy, which had not been widely known outside of South Africa prior to that point.[http://www.cbsnews.com/news/in-era-of-apartheid-footage-of-oppression-biggest-threat-to-regime/ "In era of apartheid, footage of oppression biggest threat to regime," CBS News.]

Closing scene



The closing scene of the film was photographed in a black children's cemetery in the town Dimbaza. Because of the high mortality rate, the film shows graves that have already been dug in anticipation of the newly deceased. The final words of the narrator are:

"During the hour you've been watching this film, six black families have been thrown out of their homes, sixty blacks have been arrested under the pass laws, and sixty black children have died of the effects of malnutrition. And during the same hour, the gold mining companies have made a profit of 35,000."


Additional credits



*Thanks toward contribution costs: Alec Horsley, Defence & Aid, James Johnson.

*Special thanks to Neville Colman and Glenys Lobban.

References




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