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| Sadist | 75% | 12 votes | Total: 16 votes | |
| Hero | 25% | 4 votes |
Sadist
Created on: September 12, 2010
In the 2006 British film drama, the Idi Amin, played by Forest Whitaker. Impressed by Garrigan’s brashness, Amin seeks his medical advice and appoints him his personal physician. Garrigan is at first flattered by the attention, but soon comes to see Amin’s cruelty.
The film is a view of Uganda’s bloodthirsty dictator as seen by a relatively naïve (at first) foreigner. Many critics feel that Whitaker’s portrayal of Amin paints him as more of a tragic hero than the sadist he truly was. I think that anyone who takes that view should take another look at this film, and then read Amin’s history. A side-by-side comparison of Whitaker’s brilliant acting with the actual history of Idi Amin Dada, will show that the on screen portrayal was probably accurate.
Amin, born in 1925, joined the King’s African Rifles, a British colonial regiment, in 1946 and eventually became a Major General and commander of the Ugandan army. He overthrew Milton Obote and took power in a military coup in 1971, and promoted himself to Field Marshall. In 1979, Amin was deposed and forced to flee, first to Libya and subsequently to Saudi Arabia, where he remained in exile until his death on August 16, 2003.
During his rule, Uganda suffered a pandemic of human rights violations, ethnic persecution, and economic mismanagement on a level that was probably only exceeded by Zaire under Mobutu Sese Seko. Amin was at first supported by Britain and the West, but as information on his excesses became available, this support was withdrawn. When the UK broke off diplomatic relations in 1977, Amin declared that he had beaten Britain and gave himself the decoration CBE (Conqueror of the British Empire), and the title: “His Excellency President for Life, Field Marshall Al Hadji Doctor Idi Amin Dada, VC, DSO, MC, CBE.
Rumors abound that Amin was a cannibal, and the international media often portrayed him as a comic figure. The fact is, he was a vicious, murderous, individual, who appears to have enjoyed inflicting pain and suffering upon others – including members of his own tribal group. He had a monumental ego, and until his death, expressed no remorse for the evil things he did during his reign. I believe award winning actor Whitaker got Amin’s personality spot on. The way he showed Amin’s seemingly innocence while at the same time ordering or personally doing some of the most vicious things imaginable, portrays a psychotic personality. Watch closely the action on the screen; you see an individual who is unable inside himself to acknowledge his own evil. Whitaker, who has played primarily sympathetic or heroic characters in movies, pulled out all the stops in this performance and brought alive for viewers the evil that resided within Idi Amin. Tragic hero he was not. Clinically insane psychopath, or clever manipulator, maybe, but sadist, definitely.
Learn more about this author, Charles Ray.
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Hero
Created on: December 24, 2011
In 2006, actor Forrest Whitaker excellently portrayed Ugandan President Idi Amin in the film "The Last King of Scotland." The film follows the exploits of the Scottish Doctor Nicholas Garrigan who, somewhat accidentally, become Amin's personal Physician in the 1970's. Due to the film unfolding from Dr. Garrigan's point of view, we come to learn of Idi Amin along with the hapless Doctor, first through the opinions of Ugandans and ultimately by meeting Mr. Amin. Such is it that we learn that Amin is both a hero and quite mad.
Whitaker's performance is such that, as Dr. Garrigan first meets Amin, (as does the audience,) everyone is leery, worried. Whitaker comes across as an excitable soccer fan, eager to get to work in his new role as President, eager to talk about sport. Affable, pleasant, agitated, testy. The audience get sucked into believing Amin might be okay, or at least, not as scary as first thought. So is Dr. Garrigan, who becomes his personal Physician. Slowly over time, Amin's penchant for coldly executing acts of violence, either himself, or by his order, reinforces everyone's original fears were founded, and the man is, at the least, a sociopath.
The term hero is bandied about quite readily, particularly in western culture, arguably to the point of having lost any meaning. However, as it has been suggested that somehow sadism and heroism are at opposite ends of a previously unimagined spectrum, as well as having no real distinction afforded to the idea that "hero" is subjective, at best, an argument based upon "general impressions" seems fair. With the term "general impressions" meaning: A Hero is someone who is loved by his people. A sadist is someone who enjoys hurting people. Thus, it is clear that, whether we discuss the portrayal of the actor, or the actions of the real man, it is certainly possible to be "a sadist hero," or be portrayed as such.
It is historically true that Idi Amin committed horrific atrocities to his own people and others, Forrest Whitaker's portrayal of him leads us to understand this truth, but we cannot speak to his intentions, nor causation of them, without understanding his madness. Forrest Whitaker had at his advantage, in the year 2006, something that Idi Amin, in his time and place did not: An appreciation for the mental state of Idi Amin. We too share this with Mr. Whitaker, now. We can further look back to the results of his actions, separated from the heat of the moment. Actors playing soldiers are not soldiers. Soldiers are relied upon to do horrific things. Idi Amin, (and Forrest playing him,) are not exempt from the atrocities of war. One cannot argue that Amin "went too far" in this or that capacity, when he was simply in charge, at the top of the pyramid. The slaughter of 100 people is not very far from 1000 people, which isn't very far from 10,000 people, etc. How many people died when President Truman ordered two atomic bombs to be dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki? War makes monsters of men, this is universal.
Hero is subjective.
There is no sadism in war.
Learn more about this author, Brian Taylor.
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