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I Dreamed of Africa (2000)
African Nights: True Stories from
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From the opening swells of Maurice Jarre's lush orchestration to the
sweeping pictorial grandeur of the final shot, I Dreamed of Africa is a throwback -
an old-fashioned yarn depicting the adventures of beautiful white people against an exotic
and perilous backdrop (in this case, Kenya). In her first role since winning an Academy
Award for L.A. Confidential,
Kim Basinger stars as real life wildlife conservationist and author Kuki Gallman, who left
a life of privilege in Italy to join her husband on his family ranch in the African
plains. I Dreamed of Africa features lion attacks, snake bites, sandstorms, car
accidents, evil poachers and breathtaking vistas - in short, all the makings of a rousing
romantic epic. So why is the movie such a snooze?
We are introduced to Kuki as she is riding home from a party with
friends. As a pregnant woman in the back seat announces, "It won't be long now,"
we see the approaching headlights of a truck in the distance. It doesn't take Nostrodamus
to predict where this is heading (many equally portentous examples of foreshadowing occur
throughout the film). After the ensuing car accident, Kuki determines to shake up her life
and find some meaning. Befriending and eventually falling in love with Paolo (Vincent
Perez), the driver of the car during the accident, Kuki packs up her young son Emmanuel
(Liam Akin) and ditches her well-appointed Venice digs for the wilds of Africa, where
"life has a different rhythm" (as we are told several dozen times).
Upon arriving at the ranch, Kuki quickly learns that her African
paradise will not be all that she dreamed. While her free-spirit husband spends days at a
time off hunting and fishing with his buddies, Kuki struggles to get the homestead in
shape. Setbacks include a lion attack on the family pet and the encroaching presence of
poachers in the surrounding area. Eventually, Kuki grows to love her adopted home,
refusing to leave despite the deaths of several loved ones (giving Basinger not one but
two weepy funeral scenes) and the pleas of her patrician mother (Eva Marie Saint).
As it has in movies like Cry Freedom and A Dry White Season, the usual
colonial viewpoint prevails. A few feeble stabs are made at turning the native Kenyans
into flesh-and-blood characters, but they are essentially background scenery, just as much
as the rolling hills and shimmering rivers. Instead, we are treated to noble white
saviors, taking a heroic stand against the evils of killing elephants for their ivory.
Truly the sun never sets on the British Empire.
Director Hugh Hudson has maintained a low profile of late, but in his
80's heyday he specialized in the sort of stiff upper lip cinema pioneered by David Lean
and carried on by Richard Attenborough. Chariots of Fire won Hudson international acclaim,
while the ill-fated Revolution, starring Al Pacino, left his career in
ruins. With I Dreamed of Africa, he presents an inert simulacrum of an epic; every
frame of the movie appears to have been dipped in formaldehyde. From Basinger's wooden
line readings to the plodding, compulsory quality of so many of the scenes, Hudson has
constructed a handsomely mounted production with no spark, no texture, no life. And
even the production value is at times sub-par; in particular, the picture is marred by
some truly shoddy computer generated animals. Herds of elephants, giraffes and wildebeest
appear, all of which look better suited to last year's animated Tarzan movie than a realistic depiction of African
wildlife.
The film struggles to end on a triumphant note, but it will likely fail
to ring true for many in the audience. The real life Kuki Gallman may indeed feel that the
tragedies that befell those around her served as ennobling, character-building epiphanies
for herself, but her silver screen counterpart seems to be suffering from a serious case
of denial - straining to transform wishful thinking into a good old-fashioned Hollywood
ending.
- Scott Von Doviak