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Calls to axe 'racist' Zulu film on 11:56 - Jun 26 by WarwickHunt
I’m not offended because people said they were offended. I’m offended at the faux/vicarious outrage that may censor what I want to do or watch.
OK with you, Einstein?
But what if some people (I'm not one of them) believe that movie is insensitive in certain ways?
I mean..white supremacy doesn't really bother whites very much..surely many would say it's wrong etc but I don't see many white people getting offended to a point where they want to ban racism or white nationalism..most of them files it under "free speech".
Well for people of colour and immigrants it's not as easy as that to just say "well f*ck it let them smear us the way they won't"..racism is a form of bullying and harassment and it should be banned imo based on that.
I'm not saying this movie is a form of bullying or racism..But maybe to some Africans it touches on sensitive matters.
I mean just imagine if some radical Islamist made some sort of movie glorifying terrorist acts in the west..MOST whites would want it banned.
Guys..remember you're not alone in the world. And just because I think this specific movie isn't racist enough to be banned..To others it might be.
Calls to axe 'racist' Zulu film on 12:03 - Jun 26 by omarjack
But what if some people (I'm not one of them) believe that movie is insensitive in certain ways?
I mean..white supremacy doesn't really bother whites very much..surely many would say it's wrong etc but I don't see many white people getting offended to a point where they want to ban racism or white nationalism..most of them files it under "free speech".
Well for people of colour and immigrants it's not as easy as that to just say "well f*ck it let them smear us the way they won't"..racism is a form of bullying and harassment and it should be banned imo based on that.
I'm not saying this movie is a form of bullying or racism..But maybe to some Africans it touches on sensitive matters.
I mean just imagine if some radical Islamist made some sort of movie glorifying terrorist acts in the west..MOST whites would want it banned.
Guys..remember you're not alone in the world. And just because I think this specific movie isn't racist enough to be banned..To others it might be.
The film is a documentary of the events that week in 1879. It is not racist,it shows the bravery of both sides and the respect they had for each other.
It's just like any other war film wether it's the Battle of Britain or Napoleon..
Just an account of what happened.
This post has been edited by an administrator
PROUD RECIPIENT OF THE THIRD PLANET SWANS LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD.
"Per ardua ad astra"
Calls to axe 'racist' Zulu film on 12:10 - Jun 26 by Dyfnant
Thought you said you hadn’t seen it
I hadn't..But I trust what other posters are saying about it..And if it was actually considered racist by some people from African origins..Well I'm not African so probably I wouldn't really understand what's racist and why.
Calls to axe 'racist' Zulu film on 11:48 - Jun 26 by Lord_Bony
Actually if you read up on the subject you will find two thirds of the South Wales Borderers were actually English...also known as the 2 NDR Warwickshire Regiment.
Here's an accurate account of what actually happened.
Most of the battle was at night. It finished at approximately midnight. "The soldiers started with 24,000 rounds of ammunition. By midnight they were down to a 600-round box and any rounds they had left in their pouches. At midnight, they all expected to die. Because it is such a well-crafted film, many people treat it as a documentary Bill Cainan, Curator, The Regimental Museum of The Royal Welsh "But by midnight the Zulus had shot their bolt. The battle had started at 4.30pm and they had taken quite heavy casualties. "The British fire did not seem to be diminishing. The Zulus had jogged 15 miles to get there and swum a river in flood and they were relatively old regiments - in the uThulwana regiment the average age was 50. "The Zulus were great warriors but even they had their limit. By midnight they thought 'that's it, finished'. "If they had tried one more attack, they probably would have succeeded. The film does not convey that." Yet Zulu has done marvellous things for the memory of the war, said Mr Cainan, even if it has also obscured somewhat the truth behind a battle that is still honoured by descendants on both sides. He said: "It's a duality. Without the film, we would not have the interest in the Anglo-Zulu War, "The medals that were issued would not be worth the money they are now."
On the other hand --- in the immediate aftermath of Rourke's Drift and Isalwanda
'But that image of valour and nobility in the Anglo-Zulu war of 1879 could now turn to shame. Documents have been uncovered which show that Rorke's Drift was the scene of an atrocity - a war crime, in today's language - which Britain covered up. Taking no prisoners, they disembowelled many of the British and their colonial and native allies.
A British relief force saw the bodies on its way to Rorke's Drift, and it was this force which executed the Zulu wounded, not the garrison's men, who were resting after the battle.
In the hours after the battle senior officers and enlisted men of a force sent to relieve the garrison are said to have killed hundreds of wounded Zulu prisoners. Some were bayoneted, some hanged and others buried alive in mass graves. More Zulus are estimated to have died in this way than in combat, but the executions were hushed up to preserve Rorke's Drift's image as a bloody but clean fight between two forces which saluted the other's courage. 'Samuel Pitts, a private, told the newspaper the Western Mail in 1914 that the official enemy death toll was too low. "We reckon we had accounted for 875, but the books will tell you 400 or 500."
The limits of the Zulu nation may have been exposed at the mission but on the same day, 'The garrison's heroism was no myth, but the Victorians lionised Rorke's Drift to compensate for the debacle at nearby Isandhlwana, a British camp where 20,000 Zulus killed over 1,000 soldiers on the same day.'
British involvement in South Africa (Zulu and Boer Wars) was barbaric even by the standards of the day.
Calls to axe 'racist' Zulu film on 12:15 - Jun 26 by Badlands
On the other hand --- in the immediate aftermath of Rourke's Drift and Isalwanda
'But that image of valour and nobility in the Anglo-Zulu war of 1879 could now turn to shame. Documents have been uncovered which show that Rorke's Drift was the scene of an atrocity - a war crime, in today's language - which Britain covered up. Taking no prisoners, they disembowelled many of the British and their colonial and native allies.
A British relief force saw the bodies on its way to Rorke's Drift, and it was this force which executed the Zulu wounded, not the garrison's men, who were resting after the battle.
In the hours after the battle senior officers and enlisted men of a force sent to relieve the garrison are said to have killed hundreds of wounded Zulu prisoners. Some were bayoneted, some hanged and others buried alive in mass graves. More Zulus are estimated to have died in this way than in combat, but the executions were hushed up to preserve Rorke's Drift's image as a bloody but clean fight between two forces which saluted the other's courage. 'Samuel Pitts, a private, told the newspaper the Western Mail in 1914 that the official enemy death toll was too low. "We reckon we had accounted for 875, but the books will tell you 400 or 500."
The limits of the Zulu nation may have been exposed at the mission but on the same day, 'The garrison's heroism was no myth, but the Victorians lionised Rorke's Drift to compensate for the debacle at nearby Isandhlwana, a British camp where 20,000 Zulus killed over 1,000 soldiers on the same day.'
British involvement in South Africa (Zulu and Boer Wars) was barbaric even by the standards of the day.
Good and fair post. There is no doubt the soldiers at Rourke's Drift put up a heroic defence which is well recognised. 'Zulu' is a fictional film based on fact. It is entertaining, well acted and in my opinion respectful to the Zulu. Given it was made in the early 60s it is a lot less racist than TV shows into the 1980s. Banning it is absolute madness.
Calls to axe 'racist' Zulu film on 11:14 - Jun 26 by E20Jack
The profession of being offended is expanding rapidly it seems.
I find that offensive to people that feel offended at other people being offended by people that are not offended by people who are offensive to people that don't give a f*ck.
Calls to axe 'racist' Zulu film on 12:00 - Jun 26 by Darran
I blame ECB and Humpty.
Twenty eight people have exercised their right to freedom of speech. I don't have any problem with that.
Now I'm going to exercise my right to freedom of speech.
Grow up you silly sods and worry about something more important. This type of nonsense is self defeating as it gives credence to the view that anything PC must be bad, or "gone mad", and it's not. It's very important when applied to things that actually matter.
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Calls to axe 'racist' Zulu film on 13:30 - Jun 26 with 2277 views
Calls to axe 'racist' Zulu film on 12:10 - Jun 26 by Lord_Bony
The film is a documentary of the events that week in 1879. It is not racist,it shows the bravery of both sides and the respect they had for each other.
It's just like any other war film wether it's the Battle of Britain or Napoleon..
Just an account of what happened.
This post has been edited by an administrator
It’s only a documentary if you don’t know what a documentary is you fecking halfwit.
Anyway, all the non-PC types have been triggered by the latest in a never ending series of PC gone mad non stories. Well done, job done. Useful idiots.
And who could forget this beautiful rendition of Men of Harlech... By Ivor Emanuelle from Pontrhdyfen same as Richard Burton, still brings a tear to the eye.
Shame they changed the lyrics for the film though.
PROUD RECIPIENT OF THE THIRD PLANET SWANS LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD.
"Per ardua ad astra"
Calls to axe 'racist' Zulu film on 14:07 - Jun 26 by Humpty
The "darkies" were in their own country.
We weren't.
Point of order, a large percentage of the soldiers fighting for Britain in the Anglo Zulu war were African. Many were natives of what is now South Africa.
The creatures outside looked from pig to man, and from man to pig, and from pig to man again; but already it was impossible to say which was which.