What does it take to pull a country back from a state of tyranny? A collective leap of faith is required. People need to have confidence that others will back them, and that they’ll be successful – at least to the extent that they won’t have to fear violent reprisals from a regime they have failed to overthrow. Making this happen takes a leader whom people can really believe in. When Robert Mugabe finally stood down as President of Zimbabwe in 2017, that leader looked to be Morgan Tsvangirai; but when Tsvangirai died from colorectal cancer just a few months later, the task of leading the country’s main opposition party to victory fell upon the shoulders of 40-year-old lawyer Nelson Chamisa.
Made at some considerable personal risk to those involved, Camilla Nielsson’s documentary has unprecedented access to Chamisa’s campaign, embedded at the very heart of it during the four weeks before.
Made at some considerable personal risk to those involved, Camilla Nielsson’s documentary has unprecedented access to Chamisa’s campaign, embedded at the very heart of it during the four weeks before.
- 12/15/2021
- by Jennie Kermode
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
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