: The Zulu warriors in the film were portrayed by hundreds of real Zulus, and King Cetshwayo was played by his real-life great-grandson, Mangosuthu Buthelezi , a future South African political leader.
is a landmark British war epic that dramatizes the Battle of Rorke's Drift in 1879, where a small detachment of roughly 150 British soldiers successfully defended a mission station against approximately 4,000 Zulu warriors. Key Aspects of the Film Zulu (1964)
: Directed by Cy Endfield , an American screenwriter who had been blacklisted in Hollywood and moved to the UK to work. : The Zulu warriors in the film were
: Produced during the Apartheid era , the film faced scrutiny and was initially banned for Black South African audiences by the government, which feared the depiction of Black warriors defeating white soldiers (alluding to the earlier defeat at Isandlwana) might incite unrest. : Produced during the Apartheid era , the
: The Zulu warriors in the film were portrayed by hundreds of real Zulus, and King Cetshwayo was played by his real-life great-grandson, Mangosuthu Buthelezi , a future South African political leader.
is a landmark British war epic that dramatizes the Battle of Rorke's Drift in 1879, where a small detachment of roughly 150 British soldiers successfully defended a mission station against approximately 4,000 Zulu warriors. Key Aspects of the Film
: Directed by Cy Endfield , an American screenwriter who had been blacklisted in Hollywood and moved to the UK to work.
: Produced during the Apartheid era , the film faced scrutiny and was initially banned for Black South African audiences by the government, which feared the depiction of Black warriors defeating white soldiers (alluding to the earlier defeat at Isandlwana) might incite unrest.