Roots Review
By Christopher Null
Roots begins with Kunta Kinte, emerging from childhood and undergoing warrior training in his tribal homeland. The slavers arrive soon enough, and after a harrowing three-month ride back across the Atlantic, Kunta is sold, becomes Toby under his new master, attempts repeated escapes, and eventually accepts his fate as he settles down with a wife and child. The Revolutionary War comes and goes, and Toby's daughter Kizzy is sold, becoming the mother of her new master's son, known as Chicken George. Chicken George in turn is sent to England to pay off a gambling debt. When he returns home after 14 years, he is a free man. The Civil War arrives, and the rest of the slaves are freed. Soon enough the family faces the perils of vehement racism and the KKK, and Chicken George finally leads his family to safety in a new settlement.
The entire adventure, which gives us glimpses at (by my count) six generations of characters, spans some 100 years. The unfortunate downside is that some of those 100 years are less thrilling than others. Roots starts to bog down on disc three (of its new six-disc DVD collection), when young Kunta (LeVar Burton) is replaced by old Kunta (John Amos). Amos isn't nearly the actor that Burton is, and combined with an hour of "Kunta hangs at home," the series really starts to flag. The appearance of a terribly grating Sandy Duncan (playing the daughter of a plantation family) is a nuisance through three of the six discs. Other supporting characters are fantastic, though -- notably Ed Asner as the reluctant slave ship captain and Louis Gossett Jr. as the fellow slave who first takes Kunta under his wing. By and large, the production is thrilling and full of emotion -- and genuinely informative (albeit, like all 1970s miniseries, considerably overwrought) about the history of slavery in America.
I'd recommend the DVD collection, which features interesting commentary vignettes from many of the cast members, but it has an unfortunate problem of turning its own subtitles on and off, seemingly at random. Needless to say, this is a nuisance even greater than Sandy Duncan.
Facts and Figures
Year: 1977
Run time: 60 mins
In Theaters: Sunday 23rd January 1977
Production compaines: David L. Wolper Productions, Warner Bros. Television
Reviews
Contactmusic.com: 4 / 5
IMDB: 8.6 / 10
Cast & Crew
Director: Marvin J. Chomsky, John Erman, David Greene, Gilbert Moses
Producer: Stan Margulies
Screenwriter: William Blinn, M. Charles Cohen, Ernest Kinoy, James Lee
Starring: LeVar Burton as Kunta Kinte, John Amos as Toby, Leslie Uggams as Kizzy Reynolds, Ben Vereen as "Chicken" George Moore, Georg Stanford Brown as Tom Harvey, Cicely Tyson as Binta, Ed Asner as Capt. Thomas Davies, Ralph Waite as Slater, Louis Gossett, Jr. as Fiddler, Lorne Greene as John Reynolds, Linda Day George as Mrs. Reynolds, Robert Reed as Dr. William Reynolds, Sandy Duncan as Missy Anne Reynolds, Madge Sinclair as Belle Reynolds, Chuck Connors as Tom Moore, Scatman Crothers as Mingo, Olivia Cole as Mathilda, George Hamilton as Stephen Bennett, Richard Roundtree as Sam Bennett, Lloyd Bridges as Evan Brent, Doug McClure as Jemmy Brent, Vic Morrow as Ames, Lawrence Hilton-Jacobs as Noah, Moses Gunn as Kintango, Brad Davis as Ol' George Johnson, Thalmus Rasulala as Omoro, Maya Angelou as Nyo Boto, O.J. Simpson as Kadi Touray, Ren Woods as Fanta, Burl Ives as Sen. Arthur Justin, John Schuck as Ordell, Todd Bridges as Bud
Also starring: Hari Rhodes, Louis Gossett Jr, Lynda Day George, Paul Shenar, Lane Binkley, Tanya Boyd, Charles Cyphers, Thayer David, Hilly Hicks, Sally Kemp, Yaphet Kotto, Lynne Moody, Davis Roberts, Roxie Roker, Austin Stoker, Beverly Todd, Stan Margulies, William Blinn, Ernest Kinoy, James Lee