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"Roots" (1977)
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Overview
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Directors:
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Release Date:
23 January 1977 (USA)
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Plot:
A dramatization of author Alex Haley's family line from ancestor Kunta Kinte's enslavement to his descendents' liberation. full summary
Plot Keywords:
Awards:
Won Golden Globe.
Another 14 wins
&
35 nominations
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NewsDesk:
(7 articles)
Actor Quade Dies
(From WENN. 13 August 2009, 6:31 PM, PDT)
Reading Rainbow's LeVar Burton in Auto Accident
(From PEOPLE.com. 14 July 2009, 9:45 AM, PDT)
(From WENN. 13 August 2009, 6:31 PM, PDT)
Reading Rainbow's LeVar Burton in Auto Accident
(From PEOPLE.com. 14 July 2009, 9:45 AM, PDT)
User Reviews:
There is something for everyone, thanks to Roots
more (54 total)
Cast
(Series Cast Summary - 47 of 51)| Olivia Cole | ... | Mathilda (5 episodes, 1977) | |
| LeVar Burton | ... | Kunta Kinte / ... (4 episodes, 1977) | |
| Ben Vereen | ... | 'Chicken' George Moore (4 episodes, 1977) | |
| Louis Gossett Jr. | ... | Fiddler (4 episodes, 1977) | |
| Vic Morrow | ... | Ames (4 episodes, 1977) | |
| Ji-Tu Cumbuka | ... | Wrestler (3 episodes, 1977) | |
| Edward Asner | ... | Capt. Thomas Davies (3 episodes, 1977) | |
| Ralph Waite | ... | Slater (3 episodes, 1977) | |
| Robert Reed | ... | Dr. William Reynolds (3 episodes, 1977) | |
| Lynda Day George | ... | Mrs. Reynolds (3 episodes, 1977) | |
| John Amos | ... | Toby (3 episodes, 1977) | |
| Madge Sinclair | ... | Bell Reynolds (3 episodes, 1977) | |
| Leslie Uggams | ... | Kizzy Reynolds (3 episodes, 1977) | |
| Carolyn Jones | ... | Mrs. Moore (3 episodes, 1977) | |
| Lloyd Bridges | ... | Evan Brent (3 episodes, 1977) | |
| Georg Stanford Brown | ... | Tom Harvey (3 episodes, 1977) | |
| Brad Davis | ... | Ol' George Johnson (3 episodes, 1977) | |
| Hilly Hicks | ... | Lewis (3 episodes, 1977) | |
| Lynne Moody | ... | Irene Harvey (3 episodes, 1977) | |
| Lane Binkley | ... | Martha Johnson (3 episodes, 1977) | |
| Austin Stoker | ... | Virgil (3 episodes, 1977) | |
| Sandy Duncan | ... | Missy Anne Reynolds (3 episodes, 1977) | |
| Chuck Connors | ... | Tom Moore (3 episodes, 1977) | |
| Tracey Gold | ... | Young missy reynolds (3 episodes, 1977) | |
| Moses Gunn | ... | Kintango (2 episodes, 1977) | |
| Thalmus Rasulala | ... | Omoro (2 episodes, 1977) | |
| Hari Rhodes | ... | Brima Cesay (2 episodes, 1977) | |
| William Watson | ... | Gardner (2 episodes, 1977) | |
| Ren Woods | ... | Fanta (2 episodes, 1977) | |
| Lorne Greene | ... | John Reynolds (2 episodes, 1977) | |
| Thayer David | ... | Harlan (2 episodes, 1977) | |
| Scatman Crothers | ... | Mingo (2 episodes, 1977) | |
| George Hamilton | ... | Stephen Bennett (2 episodes, 1977) | |
| Lillian Randolph | ... | Sister Sara (2 episodes, 1977) | |
| Richard Roundtree | ... | Sam Bennett (2 episodes, 1977) | |
| Davis Roberts | ... | Leonard (2 episodes, 1977) | |
| Richard McKenzie | ... | Sam Harvey (2 episodes, 1977) | |
| John Quade | ... | Sheriff Biggs (2 episodes, 1977) | |
| Cicely Tyson | ... | Binta (2 episodes, 1977) | |
| Tina Andrews | ... | Aurelia (2 episodes, 1977) | |
| Henry Butts | ... | Sitafa (2 episodes, 1977) | |
| Joe Dorsey | ... | Calvert (2 episodes, 1977) | |
| Kermit Echols | ... | Vilars (2 episodes, 1977) | |
| Richard Farnsworth | ... | Slave catcher (2 episodes, 1977) | |
| Ronnie Leggett | ... | Kalila (2 episodes, 1977) | |
| Rachel Longaker | ... | Caroline (2 episodes, 1977) | |
| Ernest Thomas | ... | Kailuba (2 episodes, 1977) |
Additional Details
Also Known As:
Alex Haley's Roots (Australia)
Raíces (Argentina) (Spain) [es]
Roots (Austria) (West Germany) [de]
Juuret (Finland) [fi]
Kökler (Turkey: Turkish title) [tr]
Rötter (Sweden) [sv]
Rødder (Denmark) [da]
Raízes (Portugal) [pt]
Racines (France) [fr]
Radici (Italy) [it]
Wij, zwarten (Netherlands) [nl]
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Raíces (Argentina) (Spain) [es]
Roots (Austria) (West Germany) [de]
Juuret (Finland) [fi]
Kökler (Turkey: Turkish title) [tr]
Rötter (Sweden) [sv]
Rødder (Denmark) [da]
Raízes (Portugal) [pt]
Racines (France) [fr]
Radici (Italy) [it]
Wij, zwarten (Netherlands) [nl]
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Runtime:
573 min
Country:
Language:
Color:
Aspect Ratio:
1.33 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Certification:
Filming Locations:
Company:
Fun Stuff
Trivia:
Originally broadcast on ABC as eight one-hour and two-hour episodes as follows: Episodes 1,2,6, and 8 were two hours; Episodes 3,4,5, and 7 were one hour. Presented on VHS, DVD, and rebroadcast as six two-hour episodes.
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Goofs:
Factual errors: When Kunte Kinte (played by John Amos) met the Akan in the woods, they greeted each other with an Arab-Muslim greeting. The origin and highest concentration of Akan people are located in Ghana. Today, Muslims account for the lowest religious minority in Ghana: 16% of the Ghanan population. It is unlikely the average Akan clan member would have been a Muslim during the time of Kunte Kinte.
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Quotes:
John Carrington:
Uh, did you have a good voyage, Captain?
Captain Thomas Davies: My First Officer is dead, ten seaman and the ship's boy... more than a third of my crew.
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Captain Thomas Davies: My First Officer is dead, ten seaman and the ship's boy... more than a third of my crew.
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Movie Connections:
Referenced in "Saturday Night Live: Shelley Duvall/Joan Armatrading (#2.22)" (1977)
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Soundtrack:
Oluwa
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FAQ
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| "Roots: The Next Generations" | Glory | Gone with the Wind | Mandingo | "North and South" |
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I normally don't start out this way, but I feel it matters. I am a Southern White, and I have not seen this movie up until the other night.
I thought this mini-series was one of the top three or four I have ever seen. Throughout the years since this came out, I never really bothered, thinking it would be simply white bashing. It was not. I felt it might be in contradiction with the kind people and relatives I grew up knowing. It was not.
I feel that this mini-series realistically blends black history in with the history we have been fed from the Northern side as well as the Southern side.
Most southerners were not slave owners. They were represented. I think this movie strove to show the kindness in people, as well as the darkness. I look at the South with fondness, but I know that what this movie portrayed was true - in spirit, if not fact.
Sometime after this originally came out there was some controversy over Haley faking some of this. I thought (at the time), A HA! It's bull! Again, remember that I had not watched it. Upon seeing it I realized that though some of this might be fiction, it certainly rang true.
What I didn't like about the movie: Watching Sandy Duncan and Leslie Uggams play teenagers. The acting was okay. Duncan reminded me of that spoiled brat in Little House on the Prairie. My guess is that Duncan was cast so she would look like an adult child and not seem out of place compared to Uggams. It is perhaps that during the seventies Hollywood did not want to take such a chance on a younger African-American to play Kizzy. It was an important role, and our society had not allowed Blacks to come into their own. Hollywood seems to want to force their views on society, yet they are often the last to come into line.
John Amos, whom I really like, seemed to be good and bad for his role. Someone said he sounded like he was in "Good Times" at some points. I don't feel that way. I do feel that his dialect seemed slightly out of place during some moments. He did not detract from the story, though. He carried on Burton's eternal fight for freedom with the same bullheadedness.
Ben Vereen: What can I say? When he started doing Variety Shows in the Seventies, I really admired him. He could play instruments, as well as sing, dance, and act. He does not disappoint here. I was so sad when he lost his role in Silk Stalkings due to an accident. Thankfully he has recovered over time.
Madge Sinclair: What an actress! and beautiful woman, to boot. I didn't know she had leukemia during the days I watched her on Trapper John. There were some episodes where she seemed older than her years, though always beautiful. In Roots she manages to capture and portray an inner beauty and let it shine through her bondage.
Most of the white actors were well cast, Duncan aside. I didn't realize how busy Lloyd Bridges was doing so many mini-series. He makes you hate him here, so he did his job.
Ed Asner had a very poignant remark about no one really being free. It was that he felt he was becoming a slave to his job. Please do not think I am comparing the miseries of forced slavery to a large scheme of celestial bondage, but it was pointed out in this film, that at the end of the war, freedom simply meant going from slavery into some other forced form of servitude. I'm retired, yet I often feel bound to government restrictions and the things I am forced to do routinely to simply maintain my retirement. The African-Americans added to Asner's moment by later saying that when someone died, the smile on his face meant he was finally free.
When Roots came out I remember the cries of many saying, "We now have our history!" Yes, and it was blended well into all of our histories, as I have mentioned. About five years ago, when my daughter married a man of color, he made her watch Roots. She asked me what I thought of him doing that. My response was that she needed to look at all things objectively, and know that most of life is a shade of gray. I also mentioned that had I been the same city, I would have liked to have viewed it with them. Now I can at least share my thoughts and hear my son-in-law's thoughts as well.
My biggest complaint is that the DVD is already out of print. HUH? One of the greatest mini-series ever made and I have to pay scalpers' fees for a used copy? (I borrowed my copy from the library) Please, someone! put this in a continual printing, and PLEASE, do not do what you did with others (cutting whole sections out to save a buck).
This movie (along with North and South) should be required viewing for all people. For the African-Americans, this movie should be made available forever, so that it does not simply fade into folk and family lore the way that Kunta-Kinte did - with only bits and pieces remaining.