Blood Diamond is a
2006 action/
adventure drama
film co-produced and directed by
Edward
Zwick, director of
Glory
and
The Last Samurai, and
starring
Leonardo DiCaprio,
Jennifer Connelly and
Djimon Hounsou. The title refers to
blood diamonds, which are
diamonds mined in
African war
zones and sold to finance the conflicts and profit the warlords and
the diamond companies across the world. The film was nominated for
five
Academy Awards including Best
Actor (DiCaprio) and Best Supporting Actor (Hounsou).
Plot
Set during the
Sierra Leone Civil
War in 1996-1998, the film shows a country torn apart by the
struggle between government soldiers and rebel forces. The film
portrays many of the atrocities of that war, including the rebels'
amputation of people's hands to discourage them from voting in
upcoming elections.
The film begins with the
capture of
Solomon Vandy (
Djimon Hounsou), a
Mende fisherman, by the
Revolutionary United Front (RUF)
rebels when they invade the small Sierra Leonian village of Shenge.
Separated from his family, Solomon is enslaved to work in the
diamond fields under the command of a
Warlord called Captain Poison (
David Harewood) while his son Dia is
conscripted into the rebel forces, the brainwashing eventually
turning him into a hardened killer. The RUF use the diamonds to
fund their war effort, often trading them directly for arms. While
working in the RUF diamond fields as a forced laborer, Solomon
finds a large, pink diamond inside a big, broken pipe in the
diamond fields. Claiming that he must go to the toilet, Solomon
hides the diamond between his toes to try and sneak it away to bury
it. However, moments before government troops launch an attack,
Captain Poison sees Solomon hiding the diamond.
Captain Poison is
injured in an attack by government forces before he can get the
stone, and both he and Solomon are taken to prison in Freetown
, the capital
of Sierra
Leone
.
Danny Archer (
Leonardo DiCaprio),
a
white Rhodesian mercenary, trades arms for diamonds with
an RUF commander.
He is imprisoned after being caught smuggling
the diamonds into neighboring Liberia
, and the
diamonds are confiscated. He had been transporting the
diamonds to an
Afrikaner mercenary named
Colonel Coetzee (
Arnold Vosloo), who
is in turn employed by
South African
diamond company executive Van de Kaap (
Marius Weyers) and his deputy Simmons
(
Michael Sheen).
Coetzee is Archer's
former commander in 32
Battalion, the most decorated unit of the South African Border War, made up
of Angolan
and
Rhodesian soldiers and white South African officers. Archer
is desperate for a way to repay Colonel Coetzee for the diamonds
taken from him when he was arrested and thrown in jail, in the same
prison as the fisherman. While in prison, he overhears Captain
Poison ranting to Solomon about the discovery of the large diamond
and decides to hunt down the stone. He arranges for Solomon's
release from prison and offers to help him find his family in
exchange for the diamond.
Archer and Solomon find their way to Maddy Bowen (
Jennifer Connelly), an American
journalist, who helps Solomon track down his family. Bowen soon
learns that Archer is using Solomon to find his diamond and will
eventually steal it for himself, to leave Africa forever. Bowen, a
humanitarian, refuses to help Archer unless he can tell her about
the diamond market to stop the flow of blood diamonds out of
Africa, cutting off funding for Civil War and ending a mass
revolution. Archer gives Bowen the information that she wants and
gets access to use the press convoy to travel to Kono to find the
diamond.
The convoy is attacked and the remaining news teams killed while
Archer, Solomon and Bowen escape and find their way to the South
African mercenary force under Colonel Coetzee. There they learn of
the attack force preparing to retake Sierra Leone—a reference to
the actual 1995 hiring of South African security firm
Executive Outcomes by the provisional
government of Sierra Leone. The two men leave the camp on foot
(after stealing many provisions for their journey), while Bowen
boards a plane carrying foreigners out of the conflict zone. While
treking through the jungle to try and get away from Coetzee's
forces, Solomon believes he sees his son, Dia, on the back of a RUF
transport truck. He almost gets himself and Danny killed when he
calls out to get Dia's attention. They get away and eventually the
men reach the mining camp in a river valley, still under
RUF control, where Solomon discovered
and buried the large diamond. Here, Solomon is painfully reunited
with his son Dia, who refuses to acknowledge him because he has
been brainwashed by the rebels. Solomon is also reunited with
Captain Poison, who orders him to find the diamond, but the South
African mercenary force, also after the diamond, dispatches the RUF
rebels in a massive
air strike via an
Mi-24 Gunship, which kills many of the RUF
rebels and some of the miners. Amidst the chaos, Solomon kills
Poison with a shovel. Through a deal with Archer, Colonel Coetzee
forces Solomon to retrieve the stone. In a desperate battle, Archer
kills Coetzee and the other two soldiers after realizing that they
would have killed him, Solomon, and Dia upon locating the diamond.
As Archer overturns a body to take equipment he realizes he has
been shot, but keeps this to himself. At this point Dia holds
Archer and Solomon at gunpoint with a pistol, but, after an
emotional talk, Solomon manages to convince him to side with
them.
Having arranged in advance for a plane to pick him up, Danny radios
to the pilot, Nabil (
Jimi Mistry), who
demands that he dump Solomon and Dia. Slowly and painfully the
group makes its way from the valley towards an airstrip atop a
nearby ridge. Archer collapses, unable to climb, and Solomon
carries him a little ways before Archer asks Solomon to put him
down. Knowing that he is dying, he tells him to take Dia home and
gives them back the diamond he had demanded for earlier. Archer
holds off the mercenaries chasing them with his rifle while Solomon
and Dia flee, and then makes a final phone call to Bowen, asking
her to help Solomon as a last favor before looking out over the
beautiful landscape of Africa once more and dying peacefully.
Solomon
travels to London
and, with
the help of Bowen, he trades the diamond to Simmons for £2,000,000 and the reunification of his
family, making the exchange as Solomon's wife and children arrive
via a Lear Jet at a London airport.
Bowen, who secretly photographs the deal, later publishes a
magazine piece exposing the trade in "conflict" or "blood"
diamonds.
The film ends with Solomon smiling at the
photograph Maddy took of Archer earlier, now published in her
magazine along with the complete story of their journey, before
addressing a conference on blood diamonds in Kimberley
, South Africa,
describing his experiences. This refers to an actual meeting
that took place in Kimberley in 2000 and led to the
Kimberley Process
Certification Scheme, which seeks to certify the origin of
diamonds in order to curb the trade in conflict diamonds.
Cast
Controversies
When the plot of the film became public,
De
Beers, the South African diamond mining and trading company,
maintained
that the trade in conflict diamonds had been reduced from 4% to 1%
of total purchases by the
Kimberley Process. De
Beers denied a suggestion that the company had pushed for the film
to contain a disclaimer to the effect that the events it portrayed
were fictional and outdated.
More recently, the
New York
Post reported that
Warner
Bros. Pictures had promised that 27
child and teenage film extras who were amputees would receive
prosthetics once the film shoot was
done. Several months after the completion of filming, however, the
prosthetics had not been supplied, and the studio reportedly told
the amputees they had to wait until the December 2006 release of
the film to maximize a public relations boost. In the meantime, the
private charity Eastern Cape assisted in supplying prosthetics to
the amputees.
These allegations were countered by an article in
L.A. Weekly,
which stated that Warner Bros. had not promised the prosthetics,
but that the cast and crew raised between $200,000 and $400,000 to
begin a "Blood Diamond Fund," which was then matched by Warner
Bros. and "administered by a Maputo
-based
international accountancy firm under the supervision of Laws and
João Ribeiro, the production managers in Mozambique
."
Reception
Blood Diamond was released to positive reviews from both
critics and audiences. The review congregator site
Rotten Tomatoes shows a 63% rating, with 127
favorable reviews out of 203, and an average rating of
6.4/10.
Richard Roeper gave the film
four stars, calling for it to be nominated for an
Oscar for Best Picture.Some critics
complained that the film was released in the midst of an upsurge in
mass media publicity about the conflict-diamond trade and Sierra
Leone, including a song by
rapper Kanye West entitled "
Diamonds from Sierra Leone," a
VH1 documentary about conditions in Sierra Leone
called
Bling, and the
Andrew Niccol film
Lord of War starring
Nicolas Cage.
Soundtrack
Blood Diamond is the soundtrack to the movie of the same
name. It was composed by
James
Newton Howard, and won the 2008 Soundtrack of the Year
Classical BRIT Award.
Track listing
- "Blood Diamond Titles" (1:32)
- "Crossing the Bridge" (1:41)
- "Village Attack" (1:52)
- "RUF Kidnaps Dia" (3:02)
- "Archer & Solomon Hike" (1:55)
- "Maddy & Archer" (1:56)
- "Solomon Finds Family" (2:09)
- "Fall of Freetown" (4:45)
- "Did You Bury It?" (1:36)
- "Archer Sells Diamond" (1:40)
- "Goodbyes" (2:40)
- "Your Son is Gone" (1:21)
- "Diamond Mine Bombed" (4:31) )
- "Solomon's Helping Hand" (1:11)
- "G8 Conference" (2:36)
- "Solomon & Archer Escape" (2:12)
- "I Can Carry You" (1:30)
- "Your Mother Loves You" (2:24)
- "Thought I'd Never Call?" (3:56)
- "London" (2:38)
- "Solomon Vandy" (2:11)
- "Ankala" - Performed by Sierra Leone's Refugee All
Stars (4:12)
- "Baai" - Performed by Emmanuel Jal
with Abd El Gadir Salim
(4:37)
- "When Da Dawgs Come Out to Play" (Album Version) - Performed by
Bai Burea, featuring Masta Kent and Bullet Rhymes
(3:19)
Awards and nominations
79th Academy
Awards
2007 Black Reel
Awards
- Best Supporting Actor - Djimon Hounsou (won)
12th Critics'
Choice Awards:
64th Golden Globe
Awards:
NAACP Image
Awards:
78th
National Board of Review Awards:
11th Satellite
Awards:
- Best Actor in a Motion Picture Drama - Leonardo DiCaprio
(nominated)
13th Annual
Screen Actors Guild Awards:
DVD
The
DVD was released in Region 1 format on March
20, 2007. Both a single-disc and a two-disc version are available.
High Definition versions on
HD DVD and
Blu-ray have also been released. (Rating:
R)
See also
References
- Blood Diamond Movie Reviews, Pictures - Rotten
Tomatoes, Retrieved Jul. 23, 2008.
External links
Trailer
Reviews