by Raoul Peck
Belgium, France, Germany and Haiti / 2000 / 115mins / Biopic, Historical Drama / French and Lingala
Lumumba is a dramatic portrait of a man's courageous fight for his country's independence. Almost forty years after Patrice Emery Lumumba's assassination, this African tragedy has a haunting relevance for modern audiences. This historical thriller opens with the gruesome demise of Lumumba, the charismatic first leader of the newly independent Zaire. In this scene, Lumumba's body, along with those of two of his closest allies, is being dismembered in order to destroy all traces of the man and his ideals.
Trailer
Raoul Peck
Born 1953 in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Peck lived for a time in Zaire and worked as a journalist and photographer. He later graduated from the Berlin Film Academy in 1988, made a dozen short and features from his Velvet Productions, based in France and Germany, and served until recently as the Minister of Culture of Haiti. A book of screenplays and images from four of Peck's major features and documentary films, called Stolen Images, was published in February 2012 by Seven Stories Press. He has been Chairman of La FĂ©mis, the French state film school, since January 2010. In 2012, he was named as a member of the Jury for the Main Competition at the 2012 Cannes Film Festival. He won the Best Documentary prize at the Trinidad & Tobago Film Festival in 2013 for Fatal Assistance. His documentary film I Am Not Your Negro (2016), about the life of James Baldwin and race relations in the United States, was nominated for an Oscar in January 2017. Learn More