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Out of Africa (film)

1985 film by Sydney Pollack

Out of Africa (film)

Summary

1985 film by Sydney Pollack

FieldValue
nameOut of Africa
imageOut_of_Africa_(1985).jpg
captionTheatrical release poster
directorSydney Pollack
producerSydney Pollack
Kim Jorgensen
based_on{{plainlist
screenplayKurt Luedtke
starring{{Plainlist
musicJohn Barry
cinematographyDavid Watkin
editingFredric Steinkamp
William Steinkamp
Pembroke Herring
Sheldon Kahn
studioMirage Enterprises
distributorUniversal Pictures
released
runtime161 minutes
countryUnited States
languageEnglish
Swahili
budget$31 million
gross$227.5 million

Kim Jorgensen

  • Robert Redford
  • Meryl Streep
  • Klaus Maria Brandauer William Steinkamp Pembroke Herring Sheldon Kahn Swahili

Out of Africa is a 1985 American epic romantic drama film directed and produced by Sydney Pollack, and starring Meryl Streep and Robert Redford. The film is based loosely on the 1937 autobiographical book Out of Africa written by Isak Dinesen (the pseudonym of Danish author Karen Blixen), with additional material from Dinesen's 1960 book Shadows on the Grass and other sources.

The book was adapted into a screenplay by Kurt Luedtke, and this screenplay was filmed in 1984. Streep played Karen Blixen, Redford played Denys Finch Hatton, and Klaus Maria Brandauer played Baron Bror Blixen. Others in the film include Michael Kitchen as Berkeley Cole, Malick Bowens as Farah, Stephen Kinyanjui as the Chief, Michael Gough as Lord Delamere, Suzanna Hamilton as Felicity, and the model and actress Iman as Mariammo. The film received generally positive reviews from critics. It was also a commercial success and won seven Academy Awards including Best Picture and Best Director for Pollack.

Plot

In 1913, after being turned down by a Swedish nobleman, Danish aristocrat Karen Dinesen suggests a marriage of convenience to the nobleman's brother, Baron Bror Blixen. They plan to move to Nairobi, British East Africa, where Bror intends to invest Karen's money in a dairy farm. She will join him a few months later, and they will get married. On her way to Nairobi, Karen's train is stopped by big-game hunter Denys Finch Hatton, who knows Bror and entrusts her with his ivory haul.

Farah, the Somali headman Bror hired, greets Karen at the railway station. She is taken to the Muthaiga Club. She enters the men-only salon seeking her future husband, but is soon asked to leave. Karen and Bror immediately marry and Karen becomes Baroness Blixen. She learns that Bror has changed their plan and instead bought a coffee farm, but it is at too high an elevation to be very productive. She needs Bror's help managing the farm, but he is more interested in guiding big-game hunting safaris.

Karen comes to love Africa and its people. She looks after the Kikuyu people who live on her land, establishes a school there, helps with their medical needs, and arbitrates their disputes. Meanwhile, she attempts to build a formal European homelife on par with that of nearby upper-class colonists. She befriends a young woman, Felicity (whose character is based on a young Beryl Markham). Eventually, Karen and Bror's mutual feelings deepen, and they do consummate their marriage. However, Bror keeps pursuing other women, while Karen fills her evenings socialising with neighbor visitors.

As World War I approaches East Africa, colonists form a militia led by colonial patriarch Lord Delamere, which includes Denys and Bror. A military expedition searches for forces from the neighboring German colony of German East Africa. Responding to the militia's need for supplies, Karen leads a long, exhausting expedition to find them and returns safely. Karen contracts syphilis from Bror, then goes back to Denmark for treatment and recovery while Bror manages the farm in her absence. After Karen's return, Bror resumes his safari work. They live apart after she finds out he is still a womanizer.

A relationship between Karen and Denys develops after a tentative kiss at a New Year's party, with them eventually moving in together while he travels. Denys buys a Gipsy Moth biplane and often takes Karen flying. When Bror mentions he wants to divorce and marry another wealthy woman, Karen asks Denys to make their relationship official, but he prefers his independence and keeping the status quo. When Karen finds out Denys is taking Felicity on a private safari, she confronts him about his refusal to be monogamous. He assures her he wants only her, but marriage doesn’t matter to him. This eventually drives them apart.

The farm eventually produces a good harvest, but a fire destroys it along with the factory, forcing Karen to sell out. Before leaving Kenya for Denmark, she appeals to the incoming governor to provide land for her Kikuyu workers and sells most of her remaining possessions at a rummage sale. Denys visits the now-empty house, saying he no longer feels comfortable being alone and that his feelings for her have changed. He asks to join her on her journey back.

Denys departs for a safari scouting trip, promising to fly Karen to Mombasa upon his return. Soon after, Bror arrives to inform Karen that Denys' plane has crashed in Tsavo. Karen organizes his funeral, during which she recites an excerpt from an A. E. Housman poem about a celebrated athlete who, like Denys, died young and was not meant to grow old.

Before leaving, Karen visits the Muthaiga Club to arrange for her mail to be forwarded. The members, having come to respect her, invite her into the men-only salon for a toast. Karen gives Farah the compass Denys had given her and asks him to say her name so she can hear his voice one last time. Later, Farah writes to Karen, telling her that a pair of lions often visits Denys's grave.

An epilogue reveals that Karen became an author, publishing her works under the name Isak Dinesen, and never returned to Africa.

Cast

  • Robert Redford as Denys Finch Hatton
  • Meryl Streep as Karen Blixen
  • Klaus Maria Brandauer as Bror and Hans von Blixen-Finecke
  • Michael Kitchen as Berkeley Cole
  • Shane Rimmer as Belknap
  • Malick Bowens as Farah Aden
  • Joseph Thiaka as Kamante
  • Stephen Kinyanjui as Chief Kinanjui
  • Michael Gough as Hugh Cholmondeley, Lord Delamere
  • Suzanna Hamilton as Felicity Spurway
  • Rachel Kempson as Sarah, Lady Belfield
  • Graham Crowden as Henry, Lord Belfield
  • Leslie Phillips as Sir Joseph Aloysius Byrne
  • Annabel Maule as Lady Byrne
  • Donal McCann as Doctor in Nairobi
  • Benny Young as Minister
  • Iman as Mariammo
  • Job Seda as Kanuthia

Production

Wedding dress worn by Meryl Streep in the film

The film tells the story as a series of six loosely coupled episodes from Karen's life, intercut with her narration. The final two narrations, the first a reflection on Karen's experiences in Kenya and the second a description of Finch Hatton's grave, were taken from her book Out of Africa, while the others were written for the film in imitation of her very lyrical writing style. The pace of this film is often rather slow, reflecting Blixen's book, "Natives dislike speed, as we dislike noise..."

Klaus Maria Brandauer was director Sydney Pollack's only choice for Bror Blixen, causing problems finding a replacement when it appeared that Brandauer's schedule would prevent him from participating. Robert Redford became Finch Hatton, with Pollack thinking Redford had a charm no British actor could convey. Meryl Streep landed the part by showing up for her meeting with the director wearing a low-cut blouse and a push-up bra, as Pollack had originally thought the actress did not have enough sex appeal for the role.

Out of Africa was filmed using descendants of several people of the Kikuyu tribe who are named in the book, including the grandson of chief Kinyanjui who played his grandfather. Much of it was filmed in the Karen / Lang'ata area near the actual Ngong Hills outside Nairobi. The Chyulu Hills stood in for the less picturesque Ngong Hills. As Karen's farmhouse was at the time of filming a part of a local nursing school, the filming took place in her nearby first house "Mbogani", which is a dairy today. Her actual house, known as "Mbagathi" is now the Karen Blixen Museum. A substantial part of the filming took place in the Scott house and in a recreation of 1910s Nairobi built in an area of unoccupied land in Langata.

The scenes depicting the Government House were shot at Nairobi School with the administration block providing a close replica of British colonial governors' residences. The train sequences were filmed along a section of abandoned track between Gilgil and Thompsons Falls some 97 km north west of Nairobi. The steam locomotive, taken from display in the Nairobi Railway Museum was non functional, therefore a diesel locomotive was hidden inside a box car behind the steam locomotive and the diesel pushed the train along while steam and smoke effects were provided. The scenes set in early 20th-century rural Denmark were filmed at Castle Rising, near King's Lynn, England. The historic castle was visually adapted to represent a Danish counterpart, providing the backdrop for Karen Blixen's return home for medical treatment following her illness in Kenya.

Historical differences

Although bearing the name of Dinesen's book, the picture was actually taken from two other books (not written by her) as well. It quotes the start of the Dinesen's book, "I had a farm in Africa, at the foot of the Ngong Hills", and Karen recites, "He prayeth well, who loveth well both man and bird and beast" from The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, which becomes the epitaph inscribed on Finch Hatton's grave marker.

The film omits much of Dinesen's book, such as a devastating locust swarm, some local shootings, and her writings about the German army. The production also plays down the size of her 4,000 acre farm, which had 800 Kikuyu workers and an 18-oxen wagon. Scenes show Karen as owning only one dog, but actually, she had two similar dogs named Dawn and Dusk.

The movie also takes liberties with Denys and Karen's romance. They met at a hunting club, not in the plains. Denys was away from Kenya for two years on military assignment in Egypt, which is not mentioned. Denys took up flying and began to lead safaris after he moved in with Karen. The film also ignores that Karen was pregnant at least once with Finch Hatton's child but suffered from miscarriages. Furthermore, Denys was an English aristocrat and son of 13th Earl of Winchilsea, but this fact was minimized by the hiring of the actor Robert Redford, an inarguably all-American actor who had previously worked with Pollack. When Redford accepted the contract to play, he did so fully intending to play him as an Englishman. Pollack, however, felt an English accent would be distracting for the audience, and told Redford to use his real accent. In fact, Redford reportedly had to re-record some of his lines from early takes in the filming, in which he still spoke with a trace of English accent.

The title scenes of the film show the main railway, from Mombasa to Nairobi, as traveling through the Kenyan Rift Valley, on the steep back side of the actual Ngong Hills. However, the real railway track is located on the higher, opposite side of the Ngong Hills. The passenger car was actually a small combination office/sleeper that was originally used by supervisors during the building of the Uganda Railway and was the actual car from which a man was taken and killed by a marauding lioness (see The Man-eaters of Tsavo).

Soundtrack

18 at 38:42 Varèse Sarabande The music for Out of Africa was composed and conducted by veteran English composer John Barry. The score included a number of outside pieces such as the second movement Mozart's Clarinet Concerto and African traditional songs. The soundtrack garnered Barry an Oscar for Best Original Score and sits in fifteenth place in the American Film Institute's list of top 25 American film scores. The soundtrack was first released through MCA Records in 1985 and features 12 tracks of score at a running time of just over thirty-three minutes. In 1987, a Special Edition was issued that included the song "The Music of Goodbye (Love Theme)" by Melissa Manchester & Al Jarreau. A rerecording conducted by Joel McNeely and performed by the Royal Scottish National Orchestra was released in 1997 through Varèse Sarabande and features eighteen tracks of score at a running time just under thirty-nine minutes. In 2024 Intrada Records issued a 2-CD expansion containing the full score, alternates, source music and the 1985 soundtrack album.

Charts

Chart (1986)Peak
position
last=Kentfirst=Davidauthor-link=David Kent (historian)title=Australian Chart Book 1970–1992edition=illustratedpublisher=Australian Chart Booklocation=St Ives, N.S.W.year=1993isbn=0-646-11917-6page=284}}29

Certifications

Technical notes

In the Director's Notes on the DVD of Pollack's 2005 film The Interpreter, Pollack himself stated that he filmed Out of Africa and his later films of that decade in 1.85:1 widescreen; and that it "...probably was one I should have had in widescreen" (i.e. anamorphic 2.39:1 widescreen). In his director's notes, Pollack stated that prior to the filming of Out of Africa, he made motion pictures exclusively in the anamorphic 2.39:1 widescreen format and style, and that he did not resume the anamorphic 2.39:1 widescreen format, due to the rise of pan and scan which had affected the compositions of many anamorphic movies, until his last movie, The Interpreter, in 2005.

Release

Critical reception

On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 62% based on 90 reviews, with an average rating of 6.90/10. The website's critical consensus reads: "Though lensed with stunning cinematography and featuring a pair of winning performances from Meryl Streep and Robert Redford, Out of Africa suffers from excessive length and glacial pacing." Metacritic reports a score of 69 out of 100 based on 18 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews". Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A" on an A+ to F scale.

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film four stars out of four and called it "one of the great recent epic romances," adding, "What we have here is an old-fashioned, intelligent, thoughtful love story, told with enough care and attention that we really get involved in the passions among the characters." Vincent Canby of The New York Times described it as "a big, physically elaborate but wispy movie" with Redford's character "a total cipher, and a charmless one at that. It's not Mr. Redford's fault. There's no role for him to act." Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune gave the film two-and-a-half stars out of four, and declared: "My basic problem with this otherwise sumptuous and well-acted film is that I never was able to accept Redford in character ... He seems distant to the point of distraction. He is not convincing in his period outfits. He looks and acts as if he just walked out of the safari fitting room at Abercrombie & Fitch." David Ansen of Newsweek wrote that the film was "well worth the wait," calling it "a sprawling but always intelligent romantic epic that depicts Karen Blixen's struggles to hold on to both the man and the land she loves and cannot possess."

Sheila Benson of the Los Angeles Times wrote that the film "seems to be just the thing for famished culture mavens at Christmastime. Unfortunately, and through no fault of Meryl Streep, there doesn't seem to be enough electricity generated out there in Africa to power a love story 2½ hours long". Variety found that the film "rarely really comes to life except when Redford is around, which unfortunately is not often in the first hour," but once Streep and Redford get together it becomes "a wonderful romance, probably Redford's best since The Way We Were".

Pauline Kael of The New Yorker described the film as "unsatisfying" and wrote that Streep is "animated in the early scenes; she's amusing when she acts ditsy, and she has some oddly affecting moments. Her character doesn't deepen though, or come to mean more to us, and Redford doesn't give out with anything for her to play against." Paul Attanasio of The Washington Post stated that the film "has little in the way of narrative drive" and "rarely seems more than an elevated form of tourism."

Reviewing the film in 2009, James Berardinelli wrote: "Watching Out of Africa a quarter of a century after its release, it's almost impossible to guess how it won the Oscar for Best Picture ... Sydney Pollack's direction is quietly competent and the acting by Meryl Streep and Robert Redford is top notch. But the lazy story is little more than an ordinary melodrama that simmers without ever reaching a boil. To tell the truth, during the entirety of the movie's nearly three-hour running length, I was more interested in the scenery and Barry's music than I was in the characters."

Box office

The film was the fifth-highest-grossing film of 1985 in the United States and Canada with a gross of $87 million.

Accolades

AwardCategoryNominee(s)Result
Academy AwardsBest PictureSydney Pollack
Best Director
Best ActressMeryl Streep
Best Supporting ActorKlaus Maria Brandauer
Best Adapted ScreenplayKurt Luedtke
Best Art DirectionArt Direction: Stephen B. Grimes;
Set Decoration: Josie MacAvin
Best CinematographyDavid Watkin
Best Costume DesignMilena Canonero
Best Film EditingFredric Steinkamp, William Steinkamp, Pembroke J. Herring, and Sheldon Kahn
Best Original ScoreJohn Barry
Best SoundChris Jenkins, Gary Alexander, Larry Stensvold, and Peter Handford
American Cinema Editors AwardsBest Edited Feature FilmFredric Steinkamp, William Steinkamp, Pembroke J. Herring, and Sheldon Kahn
BMI Film & TV AwardsFilm Music AwardJohn Barry
British Academy Film AwardsBest Actress in a Leading RoleMeryl Streep
Best Actor in a Supporting RoleKlaus Maria Brandauer
Best Adapted ScreenplayKurt Luedtke
Best CinematographyDavid Watkin
Best Costume DesignMilena Canonero
Best Original MusicJohn Barry
Best SoundTom McCarthy Jr., Peter Handford, and Chris Jenkins
British Society of Cinematographers AwardsBest Cinematography in a Theatrical Feature FilmDavid Watkin
César AwardsBest Foreign FilmSydney Pollack
David di Donatello AwardsBest Foreign Film
Best Foreign Producer
Best Foreign Director
Best Foreign ActorRobert Redford
Best Foreign ActressMeryl Streep
Best Foreign ScreenplayKurt Luedtke
Directors Guild of America AwardsOutstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion PicturesSydney Pollack
DVD Exclusive AwardsBest DVD Audio CommentarySydney Pollack (for the Collector's Edition)
Golden Globe AwardsBest Motion Picture – Drama
Best Actress in a Motion Picture – DramaMeryl Streep
Best Supporting Actor – Motion PictureKlaus Maria Brandauer
Best DirectorSydney Pollack
Best ScreenplayKurt Luedtke
Best Original ScoreJohn Barry
Golden Screen Awards
Guild of German Art House Cinemas AwardsForeign FilmSydney Pollack
Japan Academy Film PrizeOutstanding Foreign Language Film
Joseph Plateau AwardsBest ScoreJohn Barry
Kansas City Film Critics Circle AwardsBest ActressMeryl Streep
Best Supporting ActorKlaus Maria Brandauer
London Critics Circle Film AwardsSpecial Achievement AwardJohn Barry
Los Angeles Film Critics Association AwardsBest Film
Best ActressMeryl Streep
Best CinematographyDavid Watkin
Nastro d'ArgentoBest Foreign DirectorSydney Pollack
Best Foreign ActressMeryl Streep
National Board of Review AwardsTop Ten Films
Best Supporting ActorKlaus Maria Brandauer
National Society of Film Critics AwardsBest Supporting Actor
New York Film Critics Circle AwardsBest Film
Best ActressMeryl Streep
Best Supporting ActorKlaus Maria Brandauer
Best CinematographerDavid Watkin
Sant Jordi AwardsBest Foreign ActressMeryl Streep
Writers Guild of America AwardsBest Screenplay – Based on Material from Another MediumKurt Luedtke

American Film Institute lists:

  • 2002 AFI's 100 Years... 100 Passions #13
  • 2005 AFI's 100 Years of Film Scores #15

References

References

  1. Harmetz, Aljean. (November 29, 1985). "At the Movies". [[The New York Times]].
  2. {{mojo title. outofafrica. Out of Africa
  3. ''[[Out of Africa]]'', p. 252
  4. "Song of Africa", ''Out of Africa'' DVD
  5. "The thinking behind Nairobi's grand schools".
  6. (2025). "West Norfolk Film History". Borough Council of King's Lynn & West Norfolk.
  7. (1938). "Out of Africa". Random House.
  8. (1828). "The poetical works of S.T. Coleridge [microform] : including the dramas of Wallenstein, Remorse, and Zapola. In Three Volumes. Vol. II: The Rime of The Ancient Mariner. In Seven Parts.". William Pickering.
  9. link. (2011-07-16 at [http://www.afi.com AFI.com])
  10. [http://www.filmtracks.com/titles/out_africa.html ''Out of Africa''] soundtrack review at [http://www.filmtracks.com Filmtracks.com]
  11. "OUT OF AFRICA (2CD - EXPANDED)".
  12. Kent, David. (1993). "Australian Chart Book 1970–1992". Australian Chart Book.
  13. (15 November 1986). "Majors".
  14. Salaverrie, Fernando. (September 2005). "Sólo éxitos: año a año, 1959–2002". [[Sociedad General de Autores y Editores.
  15. The Interpreter, DVD#25835, Universal Studios
  16. "''Out of Africa'' (1985)". [[Fandango Media]].
  17. "Out of Africa Reviews". [[CBS Interactive]].
  18. Sandomir, Richard. (March 18, 2024). "Ed Mintz, Who Gave Audiences the Chance to Grade Films, Dies at 83".
  19. Ebert, Roger. (December 20, 1985). "Out of Africa".
  20. Canby, Vincent (December 18, 1985). "[https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/packages/html/movies/bestpictures/africa-re.html?scp=3&sq=loews&st=cse Screen: Out of Africa.]" ''[[The New York Times]]''. C17.
  21. Siskel, Gene (December 20, 1985). "Redford mars the beauty of 'Out of Africa'". ''[[Chicago Tribune]]''. Section 7, p. A, M.
  22. Ansen, David (December 23, 1985). "Paradise Remembered". ''[[Newsweek]]''. p. 72.
  23. Benson, Sheila (December 18, 1985). [https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1985-12-18-ca-26572-story.html "Two Women of Substance in Unlikely Settings."] ''[[Los Angeles Times]]''. Part VI, p. 1.
  24. "Film Reviews: Out of Africa". ''[[Variety (magazine). Variety]]''. December 11, 1985. 17.
  25. Kael, Pauline (December 30, 1985). "The Current Cinema". ''[[The New Yorker]]''. 67, 68.
  26. Attanasio, Paul (December 20, 1985). "[https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/1985/12/20/out-of-africa-redford-38/a0147dd0-43c7-4d8c-ad6d-757602cee6f7/?noredirect=on 'Out of Africa': Redford & Streep in a Tropical Tupor.]" ''[[The Washington Post]]''. C4.
  27. Berardinelli, James. (May 28, 2009). "Out of Africa".
  28. (October 11, 1999). "Pollack: From 'Eyes' To 'Hearts'".
  29. "The 58th Academy Awards (1986) Nominees and Winners". oscars.org.
  30. (2012). "NY Times: Out of Africa". [[The New York Times]].
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