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Last Grave at Dimbaza

Last Grave at Dimbaza

In 1969, a small group of South African exiles and British film students formed Morena Films in London to produce films about the apartheid. In 1974, they produced one of the first, and certainly the most influential, films about apartheid. LAST GRAVE AT DIMBAZA - shot clandestinely in South Africa and smuggled out of the country - had an enormous impact on global opinion at a critical moment in the struggle against apartheid, revealing to worldwide audiences the shocking inequalities between whites and blacks in South Africa. It went on to win major awards at many international film festivals. The streaming version was encoded from a newly restored digital master.

This documentary exposé is now a rare, primary visual resource, a portrait of a time and place that was largely unrecorded by photographs or film. It combines scenes of everyday life in South Africa with statements from political leaders that characterize the government's blatantly racist policies.

Filmed throughout South Africa, from Capetown to Johannesburg, as well as in the surrounding black townships and the desolate bantustans, LAST GRAVE AT DIMBAZA visually portrays the stark contrasts between living and working conditions for the majority populace of 18 million blacks and the 4 million whites who rule over them. In addition to revealing the migratory labor system, which separates black families for most of the year, and a repressive passbook policy to control black workers' movements, the film examines the gross inequities in such areas as housing, education, health care, industry, and agriculture.

By combining its clandestinely-photographed scenes of everyday life with relevant statements from National Party leaders such as B.J. Vorster that characterize the government's unabashedly racist policies, LAST GRAVE AT DIMBAZA becomes a stunning indictment of the apartheid system, which had controlled South Africa since 1948. The film's concluding scenes, contrasting increasing labor unrest and strikes amongst black workers and the compulsory training in armaments use for all white South Africans, dramatically foreshadows the conflict that developed during the following two decades, and which culminated in the end of apartheid with the nation's first multiracial elections in 1994.

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