Zulu with Stanley Baker: DVD Cover
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Zulu Director: Cy Raker Endfield Cast: Stanley Baker, Jack Hawkins, Ulla Jacobsson, James Booth

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  • DVD Release Date: 05/20/2003
  • Original Release: 1964
  • Rating: Not Rated
  • Sales Rank: 1,991
 
  • Overview
  • Editorial Reviews
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  • Customer Reviews
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Features

Original theatrical trailer

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Scene Index

Side #1 --
1. Death at Isandhlwana/Title [3:20]
2. Zulu Wedding [7:06]
3. "A War Has Started" [2:35]
4. Bromhead's Flaming Dinner [11:25]
5. Collaborative Command [6:02]
6. Not Much of an Army [4:58]
7. A Jolly Deadly Strategy [2:48]
8. As Good a Church as Any [3:14]
9. Too Sick to Fight [7:30]
10. "We Need You!" [7:39]
11. Like a Train in the Distance [5:39]
12. First Line of Attack [10:08]
13. Getting Rid of Witt [4:45]
14. Defending the North Wall [7:43]
15. Close Combat [4:07]
16. Your Butchered, Your Poor [6:34]
17. Defense in Two Lines [3:29]
18. The Calm Between Storms [3:53]
19. Hospital Under Fire [8:56]
20. Late Night and Early Morning [5:44]
21. Men of Harlech Fighting Back [7:47]
22. The First-Timer's Shame [4:23]
23. Honor Thy Fellow Brave [4:25]
24. Victoria Crosses/Credits [3:56]

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

Stiff-upper-lip bravery in a fight against overwhelming odds is celebrated in director Cy Endfield's widescreen extravaganza Zulu, based on the real-life story of a small group of British soldiers in 1879 who defended a mission station in Natal, Africa against an attack by 4000 Zulu warriors. There are some nice performances here, including Michael Caine in his breakthrough role as a smug, aristocratic British officer, and Stanley Baker as a gutsy British engineer who takes command of the small outpost. The Zulu tribe, however, is represented only by a vast number of warriors, never introduced individually. This portrayal of the Zulus as a faceless enemy has lead to criticism of the movie as a romanticized depiction of British imperialism, and it's a valid point, as the film steadfastly ignores any political issues involving the history of the British presence in Africa. But despite the film's Anglocentricity, it splendidly captures the spectacle of the Zulu army -- the magnificence of their dress, battlefield rituals, and chants. Moreover, the choral grandeur of the native African music that is sung during an extended opening scene of a Zulu wedding simply overwhelms the typically Western musical score that follows. By the time the surrounded soldiers start singing "Men of Harlech" in response to the chanting of the Zulu warriors, Zulu takes on layers of irony that may indeed have been unintended, but are powerful and thought provoking nonetheless. Gregory Baird, Barnes & Noble

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Customer Reviews

An Amazing Filmby Anonymous

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August 14, 2008: I love this movie!! All the events depicted in the film are try to what actually happened in Isldhwana,0n January 22-23 1879. All the actors are great, Michael Caine is really good in this(his first major role).

''Zulu'' deliversby Anonymous

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February 16, 2003: This film will offend the rubberstamp political correctness of anyone who substitutes slogans for thought. The story is of a small group of men who faced down a more numerous enemy, and through courage and discipline, survived. That they were British soldiers, and that the film doesn't go into a long dissertation of the excesses of Bristish colonialism, will offend some, but will educate others as to how Britain was able to rise for a time, as did the Romans, upon a cultural ability to engender, organize and implement a personal and communal discipline unusual in the world in their respective times. The film respects the Zulu as a formidable force, but does not shy away from portraying their king as a brutal fellow with no regard for the lives of his underlings. The result is a film whose personal nature and uncompromising realism will stand the test of time despite political fashions.

This review was written about the DVD Wide Screen edition.


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