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[ "Resident Evil 5", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Resident Evil 5<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Resident Evil 5 is a 2009 third-person shooter video game developed and published by Capcom. It is a major installment in the Resident Evil series, and was announced in 2005—the same year its predecessor Resident Evil 4 was released. Resident Evil 5 was released for the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 consoles in March 2009 and for Windows in September 2009. It was re-released for PlayStation 4 and Xbox One in June 2016. The plot involves an investigation of a terrorist threat by Bioterrorism Security Assessment Alliance agents Chris Redfield and Sheva Alomar in Kijuju, a fictional region of West Africa. Chris learns that he must confront his past in the form of an old enemy, Albert Wesker, and his former partner, Jill Valentine. The gameplay of Resident Evil 5 is similar to that of the previous installment, though it is the first in the series designed for two-player cooperative gameplay. It has also been considered the first game in the main series to depart from the survival horror genre, with critics saying it bore more resemblance to an action game. Motion capture was used for the cutscenes, and it was the first video game to use a virtual camera system. Several staff members from the original Resident Evil worked on Resident Evil 5. The Windows version was developed by Mercenary Technology. Resident Evil 5 received a positive reception, despite some criticism for its control scheme. The game received some complaints of racism, though an investigation by the British Board of Film Classification found the complaints were unsubstantiated. As of December 2022, when including the original, special and remastered versions, the game had sold 13.5 million units. It is the best-selling game of the Resident Evil franchise, and the original version remained the best-selling individual Capcom release until March 2018, when it was outsold by Monster Hunter: World. A sequel, Resident Evil 6, was released in 2012.
narrative location
36,845
114,707
[ "The Snows of Kilimanjaro (1952 film)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Snows of Kilimanjaro (1952 film)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Filming The film was shot on location in Nairobi, Kenya, Cairo, Egypt, and the French Riviera, and studio work was done at Stage 14 in 20th Century Fox Studios. During production, on April 8, 1952, when Peck was carrying Gardner for a scene in the film, Peck wrenched his knee and production had to be postponed for 10 days while he recovered in his Pacific Palisades home, and Hildegard Knef came down with influenza in the studios. She was able though to sing two Cole Porter tunes in the film. Jazz musician Benny Carter performs early on in the film.The bullfight sequences were archive footage, taken from Fox's 1941 film Blood and Sand. Circus animal trainer Pat Anthony replaced Gregory Peck as his stand-in for the hyena attack scene.
narrative location
36,846
114,708
[ "Africa Express (film)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Africa Express (film)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,711
[ "El Cid (film)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>El Cid (film)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,713
[ "The Cruelest Day", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Cruelest Day<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. The Cruelest Day (Italian: Ilaria Alpi - Il più crudele dei giorni) is a 2003 Italian drama film directed by Ferdinando Vicentini Orgnani. It is a dramatization of the last days of life of RAI journalist Ilaria Alpi and of her cameraman Miran Hrovatin before they were killed in Mogadishu, Somalia, on March 20, 1994. For her performance Giovanna Mezzogiorno won the Nastro d'Argento for best actress.
narrative location
36,849
114,715
[ "Roar (film)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Roar (film)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Filming Principal photography began on October 1, 1976, and was initially scheduled to last for six months, but filming was restricted to five months at a time because the cottonwood trees on set turned brown from November until March. Filming the big cats was difficult and frustrating; cinematographer Jan de Bont often spent hours setting up five cameras and waiting for the cats to do something that could be included in the film. This eventually led to Marshall and the crew recording footage in documentary style with up to eight Panavision 35mm cameras. One scene where Marshall and Mativo drive a 1937 Chevrolet containing two tigers took seven weeks to complete, because Glassey and Miller had to train the animals to ride in a car. Marshall often refused to stop filming because he did not want to lose a take; sometimes only one take was usable from a day's filming.The opening footage of Marshall racing a bull giraffe on a motorcycle was filmed in Kenya, with the location acknowledged in the credits. One session involved a leopard licking Hedren's face which had been coated in honey; Hedren considered it to be one of the most dangerous scenes she agreed to film as although handlers were 8 feet (2.4 m) away, they would not have been able to stop the cat from biting her. In the scenes where some of the big cats are shot and killed by hunters, the effect was achieved by filming the animals when they were tranquilized for their annual blood draw.Filming took five years to complete. Although Hedren has claimed that principal photography ended on October 16, 1979, after just over three years, additional pick-up shots were filmed in Kenya during the editing stage. The total production time was 11 years.
narrative location
36,850
114,716
[ "Waiting for the Barbarians", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Waiting for the Barbarians<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,717
[ "She (1965 film)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>She (1965 film)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. She is a 1965 British adventure film made by Hammer Film Productions in CinemaScope, based on the 1887 novel by H. Rider Haggard. It was directed by Robert Day and stars Ursula Andress, Peter Cushing, Bernard Cribbins, John Richardson, Rosenda Monteros, and Christopher Lee. The film was an international success and led to a 1968 sequel, The Vengeance of She, with Olinka Berova in the title role.Plot After receiving honorable discharges from the British Army in Palestine in 1918, Professor Holly, young Leo Vincey and their orderly Job embark on an expedition into a previously unexplored region of central-east Africa. They discover the lost city of Kuma after Leo receives a mysterious map revealing the city's whereabouts. This lost realm is ruled by Ayesha, who is also known as "She-Who-Waits" and "She-Who-Must-Be-Obeyed." Ayesha is a beautiful, immortal queen, who believes Leo is the reincarnation of her former lover, the priest Kallikratees, whom she had killed two thousand years before when she found him in the intimate embrace of another woman. It was she, who met with Leo in Palestine, giving him the map to Kuma, and urging him to travel there. Leo is filled with a dogged determination to do so as he sees visions of Ayesha beckoning to him with outstretched arms. After Leo has recovered from the journey to Kuma, Ayesha persuades him to bathe in the ceremonial fire that she had bathed in 2,000 years before by which she gained her immortality. One can bathe in the flame only when it has turned blue, which it does rarely for short periods of time when astronomical events coincide. Leo would then himself become immortal. Meanwhile, Ayesha's army is attacked by her enslaved tribesmen, the Amahagger, who live outside Kuma. Ready to rebel against the queen's cruel tyranny they are incited to revolt by their leader, Haumeid, a citizen of Kuma, whose daughter Ustane dared to fall in love with Leo while nursing him back to health after his perilous journey to the city. The queen in jealousy has her cremated alive in the open molten lava pit before her throne. Her ashes are poured out in front of her outraged father, who cries out to the Amahagger for revenge. Although poorly equipped the Amahagger overcome Ayesha's army. Leo himself is about to enter the blue ceremonial fire when Billali, Ayesha's high priest, demands to be allowed to enter it to gain immortality as well since he has served the queen unselfishly for many years. He is refused, so he pushes Leo aside in a scuffle that leaves Leo knocked out, opening his way to enter the blue flames. Ayesha kills him with a javelin to prevent this. To overcome Leo's reluctance Ayesha takes him by the hand and leads him into the blue fire. Upon entering, Leo becomes immortal, but Ayesha's immortality is taken away, and she ages 2,000 years in minutes, dies, and crumbles into dust. Holly and Job have managed to get to Leo through the uprising, and Holly urges him to go once again into the fire to remove his immortality since a second time into the flames would do this as it had done to Ayesha. Unfortunately, the flame turns yellow again barring entry. The film ends with a despondent Leo vowing to wait for the fire to turn blue again that he might end the prospect of spending an eternity alone.
narrative location
36,851
114,718
[ "The Long Ships (film)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Long Ships (film)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,720
[ "Tarzan's New York Adventure", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Tarzan's New York Adventure<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Plot A cargo aircraft lands atop Tarzan's escarpment in Africa, looking for animals. While trapping lions, the three men aboard meet with Tarzan, Jane, and their adopted son Boy. Watching Boy's tricks with three young elephants, Buck Rand, the head of a circus in the United States, realizes that Boy would be a great act. When they are attacked by natives, who set a large jungle fire, it appears that Tarzan and Jane have perished in that fire. The men take Boy aboard their plane and they take-off, as the natives look on in wonderment. The chimpanzee Cheeta is able to awaken Tarzan and Jane before they are burned to death. Cheeta tells Tarzan that Boy left with the men on the aircraft. Tarzan, Jane, and Cheeta track across the jungle and, flying across the Atlantic, eventually end up in New York City. Tarzan is befuddled by the lifestyle and gadgetry of civilization and displays his quaint, noble savage ways. He complains about the necessity of wearing clothing, commenting that an opera singer that he hears on a "noisy box", "Woman sick! Scream for witch doctor!", and expressing his wonderment at taxi cabs. Tarzan also comments that various African-Americans he sees making a living throughout New York City are from this or that tribe back in his and Jane's African home. Tarzan and Jane attempt to get Boy back by legal means. A judge asks Tarzan what he considers to be the important things that he needs to teach his adopted son. Unfortunately, the circus retains an unscrupulous lawyer, who tricks Jane into admitting that Boy was not born in the jungle and is not her actual child, provoking Tarzan into attacking him in the courtroom. Tarzan makes a daring escape out a window onto a ledge, and a rooftop chase by the police immediately follows. This eventually leads to Tarzan being forced to make a spectacular 200 foot high dive from the Brooklyn Bridge into the East River to avoid being arrested. Tarzan locates the circus where Boy is being held and enlists the aid of the elephants, who have been chained by their ankles to stakes. He calls to them with his jungle yell, and they take their revenge on their tormentors by tearing free from the chains and destroying the circus. In the ensuing bedlam that follows, Tarzan is able to rescue Boy. Before their return to Africa, the judge grants Tarzan and Jane full legal custody of their adopted son.
narrative location
36,853
114,722
[ "Jungle Mystery", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Jungle Mystery<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Jungle Mystery is a 1932 American pre-Code Universal 12-chapter movie serial directed by Ray Taylor. The serial was based on a book called "The Ivory Trail" by Talbot Mundy. A 1935 feature version was also released, edited down to 75 minutes.Plot Various expeditionary parties head to Zanzibar to search for a legendary cache of ivory and a missing explorer named Jack Morgan. Tom Tyler played the hero, Kirk Montgomery, and Cecilia Parker played the heroine, Barbara Morgan, who is searching for her missing brother Jack. Boris Shillov and his henchman Comrade Krotsky are also searching for the ivory. The "jungle mystery" pertains to a half-man, half-ape creature named Zungu.Cast Tom Tyler as Kirk Montgomery Noah Beery Jr. as Fred Oakes Cecilia Parker as Barbara Morgan William Desmond as John Morgan (Barbara's father) Philo McCullough as Georgie Coutlass Carmelita Geraghty as Belle Waldron James A. Marcus as Boris Shillov Anders Van Haden as Comrade Krotsky (Shillov's chief henchman) Frank Lackteen as Kazimoto Peggy Watts as Azu (Barbara's servant) Sam Baker as Zungu (the title character; half-man, half-ape) Onslow Stevens as Jack Morgan (Barbara's missing brother; uncredited) Ralph Morgan as Recap Narrator (voice; uncredited)
narrative location
36,854
114,725
[ "White Material", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>White Material<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,727
[ "Jungle Jim in the Forbidden Land", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Jungle Jim in the Forbidden Land<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Jungle Jim in the Forbidden Land is a 1952 American black-and-white adventure film directed by Lew Landers and written by Samuel Newman, and starring Johnny Weissmuller as the title character. This was the eighth entry in Columbia's "Jungle Jim" series. Angela Greene and Jean Willes also star.Plot summary Jungle Jim battles evil ivory poachers, mutant giants, stock footage, and cheap sets with the help of a pretty anthropologist and his cute chimp Tamba.Main cast Johnny Weissmuller as Jungle Jim Angela Greene as Dr. Linda Roberts Jean Willes as Denise Lester Matthews as Comm. Kingston William Tannen as 'Doc' Edwards George Eldredge as Fred Lewis William Fawcett as Old One John Hart as Commissioner's Secretary
narrative location
36,855
114,728
[ "Journey Beneath the Desert", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Journey Beneath the Desert<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,729
[ "The Savage State", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Savage State<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,731
[ "Night of Truth", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Night of Truth<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Night of Truth (French: La nuit de la vérité) is a 2004 French/Burkinabe film, the first full-length film by director Fanta Régina Nacro. Set in a fictional West-African country, this film tells the story of the night of reconciliation between two ethnic groups, the Nayak and the Bonandés. After ten years of war and much bloodshed, Théo, leader of the Bonandés, invites the Nayak president to come and make peace. However, things do not go as smoothly as planned. The film is in French and Dioula.
narrative location
36,857
114,732
[ "Jungle Girl (serial)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Jungle Girl (serial)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Plot Dr. John Meredith, ashamed at the crime spree of his evil twin brother, Bradley, travels with his daughter, Nyoka, to Africa. There his skills as a doctor displace Shamba, the resident witch doctor of the Masamba. Years later, Slick Latimer and Bradley Meredith arrive looking for a local diamond mine and team up with the disgruntled Shamba. Bradley kills his brother John and takes his place. They also bring along Jack Stanton and Curly Rogers, who promptly join Nyoka in trying to stop the villains.Cast Frances Gifford as Nyoka Meredith. Gifford was borrowed from Paramount for the lead. Tom Neal as Jack Stanton Trevor Bardette as Dr John Meredith/Bradley Meredith Gerald Mohr as Slick Latimer Eddie Acuff as Curly Rogers Frank Lackteen as Shamba Tommy Cook as Kimbu Robert Barron as Bombo Al Kikume as Chief Lutembi Bunny the Elephant as Veela Emil Van Horn was the man inside the gorilla suit.
narrative location
36,858
114,733
[ "The King of the Kongo", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The King of the Kongo<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,735
[ "The Adventures of Tarzan", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Adventures of Tarzan<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Plot The serial's prologue features Edgar Rice Burroughs himself.Tarzan rescues Jane from Arab slave traders after they become marooned in Africa. They return to the cabin where his parents lived before their deaths. Jane is captured by Queen La of Opar, taken to that hidden city, and is to be made a sacrifice. Tarzan rescues her and they escape. Nikolas Rokoff and William Cecil Clayton, the usurper to Tarzan's title of Lord Greystoke, learn that Jane has a map to the city (which contains fabulous riches in exotic jewels), tattooed onto her back. They kidnap her and attempt to loot the city. Tarzan braves many perils, finally rescues Jane, defeats the villains and escapes La's amorous clutches.
narrative location
36,860
114,736
[ "The Three Musketeers (1933 serial)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Three Musketeers (1933 serial)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,741
[ "Schweitzer (film)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Schweitzer (film)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Schweitzer, also known as The Light in the Jungle, is a 1990 American film directed by Gray Hofmeyr and starring Malcolm McDowell and Susan Strasberg. It is about Albert Schweitzer's life in Africa.Cast Malcolm McDowell - Albert Schweitzer Susan Strasberg - Helene Schweitzer C. Andrew Davis - Dr. Lionel Curtis Patrick Shai - Joseph John Carson - Horton Herschel Henry Cele - Oganga Helen Jessop - Amanda Hampton Mike Huff - Dr. Bergman Barbara Nielsen - Rachel
narrative location
36,864
114,743
[ "Tarzan and the Lost City", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Tarzan and the Lost City<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,744
[ "Tarzan (video game)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Tarzan (video game)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,746
[ "Tarzan and the Castaways", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Tarzan and the Castaways<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,747
[ "The Garden of Allah (1916 film)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Garden of Allah (1916 film)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,749
[ "Thou Shalt Not Covet", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Thou Shalt Not Covet<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,750
[ "Echoes from a Sombre Empire", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Echoes from a Sombre Empire<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,751
[ "How Europe Underdeveloped Africa", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>How Europe Underdeveloped Africa<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,752
[ "The Best of Enemies (1961 film)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Best of Enemies (1961 film)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. The Best of Enemies (I due nemici) is a 1961 Italian film directed by Guy Hamilton and Alessandro Blasetti set during the World War II East African Campaign, but filmed in Israel. It stars David Niven, Alberto Sordi and Michael Wilding. It was nominated for three Golden Globe awards in 1963.Plot In 1941 "Abissinia" (Ethiopia) in Italian East Africa during the Second World War, British Army Major Richardson (Niven) is taken prisoner by an Italian detachment on the march in the desert when the pilot (Wilding) of his reconnaissance airplane manages to crash. He is questioned by Captain Blasi (Sordi), but gives only his name, rank and serial number. A British night attack is repulsed, but Italian Major Fornari is killed, leaving Blasi in charge. As time goes on, Blasi and Richardson come to irritate each other. Blasi decides to let the two escape to tell their superiors how ineffectual his force actually is in the hope that the British will not think them worth bothering about. However, Richardson is ordered to take his motorized squadron and round up Blasi's unit. Blasi and his men reach a fort, where supposedly the rest of their forces are rallying, but they find only abandoned equipment. Minutes later, Richardson's armored cars show up. Blasi, under the prodding of his friend Bernasconi, reluctantly agrees to surrender, though he is angry at what he considers his betrayal at Richardson's hands. He balks at Richardson's terms and has his Italian infantrymen sneak out the back, ordering most of his African soldiers to remain behind and surrender in an hour given as a deadline. Furious at being made a fool of, Richardson chases them into hilly terrain, against Captain Rootes' advice. After Blasi dismisses four African tribal warriors for misbehaving, they sneak behind the British and set a fire in the forest which destroys their armored cars and supplies. Both sides flee to an island in a nearby lake. After the fire dies down, they start marching across the desert, the outnumbered Italians as prisoners of war. When they reach a native village, the headman states he supports the Allied side and asks for the Italians' weapons and the Italians themselves, but Richardson refuses to part with either. They stop in an abandoned village because a British officer is too sick to be moved, only to find themselves surrounded by many hostile natives, led by the headman Richardson dealt with before. While they wait, Richardson and Blasi become acquainted. Richardson makes the decision to arm the Italians, but then discovers they left the Italian ammunition behind. He decides to have everyone sneak away, six at a time, down a gully, but that just makes it easier for the natives to capture them. After their weapons and boots are stolen, they are allowed to leave and take their war away with them. They reach a road. Blasi is delighted to find a road sign that indicates they are 150 miles behind Italian lines. He and his men march away. Shortly afterward, however, Richardson encounters a British convoy on its way to a victory celebration; the Italians have been defeated. Blasi and his men are recaptured. The two units meet again at a railway station. Richardson has his men present arms to show his new-found respect.
narrative location
36,866
114,753
[ "The African Queen (novel)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The African Queen (novel)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. The African Queen is a 1935 novel written by English author C. S. Forester. It was adapted into the 1951 film of the same name.Plot summary The story opens in August/September 1914. Rose Sayer, a 33-year-old British woman, is the companion and housekeeper of her brother Samuel Sayer, an Anglican missionary in German East Africa (present-day Tanzania). World War I has recently begun, and the German military commander of the area has conscripted all the natives; the village is deserted, and only Rose and her brother, who is dying, remain. Samuel dies during the night and Rose is alone. That day a London Cockney named Allnutt arrives at the village. Allnutt is the mechanic and skipper of the African Queen, a steam-powered launch, owned by a Belgian mining corporation, that plies the upper reaches of the Ulanga River. Allnutt's two-man crew has deserted him because of the rumours of war and conscription. Allnutt buries Rose's brother and brings Rose to the African Queen, where they consider what they should do. The African Queen is well-stocked with tinned food, and carries a two-hundredweight cargo of blasting gelignite. It also holds two large tanks of oxygen and hydrogen. Rose is inflamed with patriotism, and also filled with the desire to avenge insults that the Germans had piled on her brother. It occurs to her that the main German defence against a British attack by water in the area is a gunboat, Königin Luise, which guards the fictional Lake Wittelsbach into which the Ulanga feeds. She asks Allnutt if he can make the gelignite into a makeshift torpedo. Allnutt replies that that is not possible, but after some thought, he concludes that by loading the gelignite inside the emptied tanks, putting the tanks into the bow of the launch, and rigging a detonator, they could turn the African Queen itself into a sort of large torpedo. Allnutt is inclined to laugh off the idea, but he gives in to Rose's greater strength of will and the two of them set off down the Ulanga, Rose steering and Allnutt maintaining the launch's ancient, balky, wood-burning steam engine. The descent to the lake poses three main problems: passing the German-held town of Shona; navigating some heavy rapids and cataracts; and getting through the river delta. After many days on the river, they come close to Shona, and Allnutt's nerve fails. He refuses to take the launch under fire, anchors in a backwater, and gets drunk on gin. Unable to work the launch single-handedly, Rose sets out to make Allnutt's life miserable until he agrees to her plan. While he is asleep she pours all his gin overboard, then refuses to speak to him. The weak-willed Allnutt eventually gives in, and the African Queen gets underway again. They come in sight of Shona at midday. The German commander assumes that the launch is coming in to surrender (because he believes no boat could pass the rapids downriver from the town, so Shona is the only possible destination). He does not realise his mistake until it is too late, and though he and his men open fire, the launch sustains only minor damage as it passes the town. Once it is below the town, the African Queen spends several days shooting the rapids; Allnutt is exhilarated, and he and Rose are reconciled and become lovers. Rose, embarrassed, admits that she does not know Allnutt's first name; he tells her it is Charlie. On the third day the launch strikes on rocks while navigating some rapids, goes off course and does not respond well to the tiller, so they are forced to anchor on the lee side of a rock outcropping. Allnutt dives into the water to inspect the underside of the launch and finds that the driveshaft is bent and the propeller has lost one of its blades. Over the next weeks they slowly repair the damage without being able to beach the launch; Allnutt has to dive repeatedly to remove the shaft and propeller. On shore they gather wood and construct a makeshift bellows to heat the shaft so Allnutt can straighten it. Then Allnutt makes a new propeller blade out of scrap iron and bolts it to the stump of the old blade. After numerous dives to fix the shaft and propeller, they continue on their way and eventually pass the rapids, coming out of the Ulanga River into the larger Bora River, which feeds into the lake. By this point, Rose has become an expert at using the tiller and reading the complex changes of the river. Passing the river delta is long and arduous. Tormented by myriads of biting insects, sickened by malaria, and wracked by the terrible heat and powerful thunderstorms, they drag the launch through miles of reeds and water-grass with their boat-hooks, occasionally diving to cut fallen logs out of their way. Though the launch is shallow (with a draft of only thirty inches), it constantly runs aground on the thick mud. Finally, after weeks of exhausting labour, they emerge into the lake. They hide the launch in a stand of reeds and begin constructing the torpedo. Allnutt releases the gas from his two tanks and unscrews the valves, leaving a hole big enough for him to fill the tanks with gelignite, packed in mud. He cuts two holes in the front of the launch, right at the waterline, and fixes the two tanks there; he then constructs detonators from nails and revolver cartridges, so the gelignite will detonate on impact. All that is left is to pilot the launch right into the side of the Königin Luise, and the resulting explosion will destroy both vessels. They have been keeping track of the gunboat's habits, and choose a night when it will be anchored close to them. They argue about which of them should pilot the launch and which should stay behind, but in the end they agree that they will both go. They fire up the engine and set out on the attack, but halfway to their target a sudden storm sweeps up out of nowhere and overwhelms them; the African Queen sinks, and Rose and Allnutt have to swim for safety. The two lovers are separated in the storm, but both are captured by the Germans the next day. They are brought before the captain of the Königin Luise to be tried as spies. Both refuse to say how they came to the lake, but the captain sees "African Queen" written on Rose's life-saver and deduces that they must be the mechanic and the missionary's sister from the mysteriously missing launch. He decides it would be uncivilised to execute them, so he flies a flag of truce and delivers them to the British naval commander, who dismissively sends them to separate tents under guard while he takes his newly arrived reinforcements out to sink the Königin Luise. Having succeeded in this, he sends Rose and Allnutt to the coast to speak to the British Consul, where he advises Allnutt to enlist in the British Army. Rose and Allnutt agree that when they reach the coast they will ask the Consul to marry them. The story ends with the narrator's comment that "Whether or not they lived happily ever after is not easily decided." The MV Liemba, named SMS Graf von Goetzen during World War I, was the inspiration for the German gunboat.
narrative location
36,868
114,755
[ "The Perfect Life", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Perfect Life<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,757
[ "Tarzan's Quest", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Tarzan's Quest<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,758
[ "Tuareg – The Desert Warrior", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Tuareg – The Desert Warrior<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,760
[ "Tuareg – The Desert Warrior", "narrative location", "Sahara" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Tuareg – The Desert Warrior<\e1> and <e2>Sahara<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,761
[ "Big Run (video game)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Big Run (video game)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,763
[ "Black Gold (2006 film)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Black Gold (2006 film)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Black Gold is a 2006 documentary film that follows the efforts of an Ethiopian coffee union manager as he travels the world to obtain a better price for his workers' coffee beans. The film was directed and produced by Marc James Francis and Nick Francis from Speakit Films, and co-produced by Christopher Hird. It premiered at the 2006 Sundance Film Festival.Synopsis The film focuses on the coffee growers of the Oromia Region of southern and western Ethiopia, the birthplace of coffee. It follows Tadesse Meskela, the General Manager of the Oromia Coffee Farmers Cooperative Union, as he visits coffee-growing regions in Sidamo and Oromia (including the Kilenso Mokonisa Cooperative in the Bule Hora woreda in the Borena Zone of the Oromia Region), as well as a coffee processing center, a coffee auction house, and his union's headquarters in Addis Ababa. He also travels to England and the United States in an effort to promote Ethiopian coffee by eliminating the numerous middlemen. There is also a scene where coffee farmers pray to God for a higher price, which was filmed at the Negele Gorbitu Cooperative, located near Irgachefe in the Abaya woreda of the Borena Zone. The Ethiopian coffee farmers speak about their lives, with one explaining that he is cutting down his coffee plants and planting khat (a plant containing cathinone, an amphetamine-like stimulant) instead, due to the low price he is getting for coffee because of the explosion in the number of coffee farmers across the globe, and the comparatively higher price he can get for khat. The film also includes footage of the New York Board of Trade, a commodity-trading floor in New York City, where the "C" international benchmark price of coffee is set each business day based on supply and demand, and explores the effects that these international prices (which by 2006 were at an all-time low) have on Ethiopian coffee growers. Other footage was shot at the first Starbucks and the World Barista Championship at the 2005 Specialty Coffee Association of America conference in Seattle; and at a café and the Illy coffee company in Trieste, Italy. These scenes stand in stark contrast to the footage of the impoverished conditions faced by the Ethiopian coffee farmers and their families.
narrative location
36,870
114,764
[ "Ceddo", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Ceddo<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Ceddo (pronounced [ˈtʃɛd.do]), also known as The Outsiders, is a 1977 Senegalese drama film directed by Ousmane Sembène. It was entered into the 10th Moscow International Film Festival.Plot In Senegal, sometime after the establishment of a European presence in the area but before the imposition of direct French colonial administration, the Ceddo (the outsiders, or non-Muslims) try to preserve their traditional culture against the onslaught of Islam, Christianity, and the slave trade. When local king Demba War sides with the Muslims, the Ceddo abduct his daughter, Dior Yacine, to protest their forced conversion to Islam. Two members of the tribe try and fail to recapture the princess. Fearing their position is under threat, the local Imam inspires the Muslims to kill the king and the white Christian slave-traders. They convert the entire village to Islam by force, and manage to recapture the princess. When returning to the village, Dior Yacine rallies the ceddo against the Muslims, and kills the Imam who has taken her father's throne.
narrative location
36,871
114,765
[ "Jane and the Lost City", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Jane and the Lost City<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Synopsis British Prime Minister Winston Churchill sends Jane (Hughes) and the Colonel (Bailey) on a mission to prevent the diamonds of the fabled Lost City from falling into enemy hands. Journeying to Africa where they are joined by Jungle Jack Buck (Jones), their quest is dogged by Nazi agents Lola Pagola and Heinrich (Adams and Carrott). Jane and the Lost City emulates the mild eroticism of its source material, having the heroine lose items of her clothing several times during the narrative. Despite this, the film was released as PG (Parental Guidance) in the USA.Cast Sam J. Jones – ‘Jungle’ Jack Buck Maud Adams – Lola Pagola Jasper Carrott – Heinrich / Herman / Hans Kirsten Hughes – Jane Graham Stark – Tombs Robin Bailey – The Colonel Ian Roberts – Carl Elsa O'Toole – The Leopard Queen John Rapley – Dr. Schell Charles Comyn – Paddy Ian Steadman – Capt. Fawcett Graham Armitage – Gen. Smythe-Paget Richard Huggett – Winston Churchill Andrew Buckland – Grenville Albert Raphael – Rashleigh James White – Scott Victor Gallucci – Muller Patrick Hugnin – German Pilot John Alton – Freddy Magnum – Fritz the dog Dharmarajen Sabapathee - Indian chief
narrative location
36,872
114,766
[ "Jungle Jitters", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Jungle Jitters<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,768
[ "Jungle Queen (serial)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Jungle Queen (serial)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Plot In 1939, Nazi Germany sends a team of agents to incite revolt and seize British Middle Africa as a first step in conquering Africa. Attempting to place their own sympathiser in charge of the local tribe, they face resistance from Pamela Courtney searching for her Uncle Allen Courtney, a pair of American volunteers and the mysterious Jungle Queen Lothel, who appears out of nowhere in her nightgown to give advice and instructions to the tribe.
narrative location
36,874
114,769
[ "Konga Yo", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Konga Yo<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,771
[ "Lion (video game)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Lion (video game)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Gameplay The gameplay is divided into two parts. The first is a sandbox simulation mode, where the player has no predetermined goal. The second is a scenario mode, where the player has to complete specific actions; this is comparable to quests given in RPGs. As in the original, the player takes on the role of a lion chosen from a pool of 20 different animals, with varying attributes, in existing prides or handpicked groups made by the player. The player can control a single animal or all members of a pride. Unlike Wolf, which takes place in three different locales, Lion is played only on the savannas and plains of the Serengeti National Park in Tanzania (though in four different seasons). Also includes a "Lion Safari", an interactive tour of the leonine life on the Serengeti.Reception A Next Generation critic commented, "Sanctuary Woods hit a home run with its predator simulation Wolf. Its next title in the series, Lion, continues the trend by demonstrating in a very entertaining way what life can be like for large, aggressive creatures living in today's wilds." While remarking that the controls take considerable time to get used to, he found the game to ultimately be both educational and entertaining, and scored it four out of five stars.
narrative location
36,875
114,772
[ "My Animal Centre in Africa", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>My Animal Centre in Africa<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,773
[ "Queen Kong", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Queen Kong<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,774
[ "Safari (1940 film)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Safari (1940 film)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Safari is a 1940 American adventure film directed by Edward H. Griffith and starring Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Madeleine Carroll and Tullio Carminati.The film's sets were designed by the art directors Hans Dreier and Ernst Fegté.Plot Millionaire Baron de Courland arrives in West Africa in order to hunt for big game. He is accompanied by his girlfriend, Linda Stewart. De Courland hires Jim Logan to be his guide. During the safari, Linda falls for Jim, causing De Courland to be jealous.
narrative location
36,876
114,775
[ "Sammy Going South", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Sammy Going South<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Sammy Going South (retitled A Boy Ten Feet Tall for its later US release) is a 1963 British adventure film directed by Alexander Mackendrick, photographed by Erwin Hillier and starring Edward G. Robinson, Fergus McClelland and Constance Cummings.Sammy Going South was based on a 1961 novel by W. H. Canaway and adapted for the screen by Denis Cannan. It was produced by Michael Balcon Productions and Bryanston Films. The film had a difficult production period; Robinson suffered a heart attack and some cast members were bitten by snakes. It was first broadcast on British television on BBC2 on Christmas Day 1970 and on American television by the American Broadcasting Company (ABC) in 1971.Plot Ten-year-old English boy Sammy Hartland lives in Port Said, Egypt, with his parents. When they are killed in a bombing during the Suez Crisis, the boy flees the city in the ensuing panic. He sets out to reach his only living relative, an aunt who lives 5,000 miles to the south in Durban, South Africa - at the other end of the continent and in a different hemisphere. Along his journey Sammy encounters a colourful array of characters. His first "guide" is an Arab peddler who dies in a freak accident. Sammy is then rescued by wealthy tourist Gloria van Imhoff. When she wants to return him to Port Said, Sammy runs off and encounters a gruff old hunter/diamond smuggler, Cocky Wainwright, whose life is subsequently saved by the boy. When the police search for Sammy, they arrest the old man, who has been a fugitive for years. After Sammy is finally united with his Aunt Jane, he learns that the old smuggler left him his entire fortune.Reception Released theatrically in the United States as the headliner of a double bill with Crack in the World, Sammy Going South was reviewed by Howard Thompson for The New York Times. He commented: "... "Boy" is above average, in detailing the 2,000-mile trek of a war orphan during the Suez crisis in 1956, from Port Said to Durban, South Africa. The picture aims to convey the emotional growth of the battered youngster, played by 10-year-old Fergus McClelland, in his encounters with toughening, adult relationships. Most fortunately indeed, at about midpoint, that wonderful old actor Edward G. Robinson saunters into view as a grizzled, warm-hearted diamond smuggler, and gives the picture its real substance." Nominated for a BAFTA Film Award for best British cinematography in 1964, Sammy Going South was also entered into the 3rd Moscow International Film Festival. The film was a box office disappointment.
narrative location
36,877
114,776
[ "Super Fly T.N.T.", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Super Fly T.N.T.<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Super Fly T.N.T. is a 1973 American blaxploitation crime drama film directed and starring Ron O'Neal. O'Neal reprises his role of Youngblood Priest from the 1972 film Super Fly. The film was both a critical and commercial failure according to some critics. The film was released on VHS in 1993, but it has not been released on DVD or Blu-ray. It was shot in Rome, Italy and other locations such as Senegal. A sequel, The Return of Superfly, was released in 1990, with Nathan Purdee as Priest.
narrative location
36,878
114,777
[ "Adventures of Captain Africa Mighty Jungle Avenger!", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Adventures of Captain Africa Mighty Jungle Avenger!<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,780
[ "The Call of the Savage", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Call of the Savage<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. The Call of the Savage (1935) is a Universal serial based on the story Jan of the Jungle by Otis Adelbert Kline. It was directed by Lew Landers and released by Universal Pictures.
narrative location
36,880
114,781
[ "The River of Stars (film)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The River of Stars (film)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,782
[ "Tim Tyler's Luck (serial)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Tim Tyler's Luck (serial)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Premise Tim Tyler stows away on a ship bound for Africa to find his father, Professor James Tyler. He meets, and is joined by, Lora Lacey, who is chasing the criminal "Spider" Webb, the man responsible for framing her brother.Cast Frankie Thomas as Tim Tyler Frances Robinson as Lora Lacey, posing as Lora Graham Norman Willis as "Spider" Webb Jack Mulhall as Sargeant Gates Al Shean as Professor James Tyler, Tim's father Anthony Warde as Garry Drake Earl Douglas as Jules Lazarre William 'Billy' Benedict as Spud Frank Mayo as Jim Conway Alan Gregg as Brent, one of Spider's henchman Stanley Blystone as Captain Clark Everett Brown as Mogu, Spider's native henchman Skippy as Ju Ju, the Chimp
narrative location
36,881
114,783
[ "Rhino!", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Rhino!<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,784
[ "The Good Lie", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Good Lie<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,785
[ "Old Bones of the River", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Old Bones of the River<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,787
[ "So This Is Africa", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>So This Is Africa<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. So This Is Africa is a 1933 American Pre-Code comedy film directed by Edward F. Cline and starring Bert Wheeler, Robert Woolsey, Raquel Torres, and Esther Muir. It was Wheeler and Woolsey's only film for Columbia Pictures.Plot Film studio "Ultimate Pictures" plans on producing an animal picture in Africa. The studio gets the help of animal specialist Mrs. Johnson Martini. There's just one problem: she's afraid of animals. Martini and the studio soon learn of Wilbur and Alexander, a couple of down on their luck vaudevillians with a trained lion act. The duo agree to join Martini on an expedition to Africa. While there, the trio finds themselves captured by a tribe of violent Amazons.
narrative location
36,882
114,788
[ "King Solomon's Treasure", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>King Solomon's Treasure<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,789
[ "Blended (film)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Blended (film)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,791
[ "Young Ones (film)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Young Ones (film)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,792
[ "Jagga Jasoos", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Jagga Jasoos<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Production Filming took place in Cape Town, South Africa. Reports from Cape Town were that the real-world romance of Kapoor and Kaif was falling apart and occasional arguments between the two caused some delays and resulted in scenes not having the impact intended by Basu. By 20 March 2014, Basu had completed 20 days of filming with his leads and, being unhappy with initial efforts by Kapoor, intended to use the additional schedule time to re-shoot some scenes. Kapoor was simultaneously shooting for Anurag Kashyap's Bombay Velvet and Imtiaz Ali's Tamasha. Basu explained, "We've to shoot Jagga Jasoos during the gaps in the shooting of Bombay Velvet. We completed one schedule. Now we'll go into a lengthy schedule from August. By the end of the year the shooting would be complete."The film was originally going to release on 27 November 2015, but the film's release date was pushed to April 2017.
narrative location
36,884
114,793
[ "The End of Eden", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The End of Eden<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,795
[ "The Adventurer of Chad", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Adventurer of Chad<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,797
[ "The Black Decameron", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Black Decameron<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,798
[ "Cabela's Dangerous Hunts 2013", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Cabela's Dangerous Hunts 2013<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Cabela's Dangerous Hunts 2013 is a first-person shooter light gun hunting video game developed by Cauldron and published by Activision on October 23, 2012 for PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, Microsoft Windows and Wii. A Wii U port was released later on December 4, 2012. The game's story features Jacob Marshall as he tries to hunt in Africa, while remembering a past hunting trip in Alaska with his father and brother.Plot The game opens with young brothers Jacob and Luke Marshall on a hunting trip in Alaska with their father, a park ranger. The three of them are attacked by an unusually aggressive scar-faced grizzly bear. Luke saves Jacob by pulling him up a cliff instead of taking a shot at the bear. Instead, the bear kills their father, who jumps in its path to protect them and manages to kill it with his final shot. 10 years later, Jacob and Luke have become estranged from each other, but have agreed to reunite for a hunting safari in Uganda on their father's birthday. Jacob has become a conservationist while Luke has gained a reputation as a hunter of man-eaters. Before they can begin their safari, Luke receives word that a local man was dragged away from his children by a black lion, a creature previously thought to be mythical. Being reminded of the death of his own father, Luke is enraged and takes off alone in pursuit of the man-eater; Jacob follows to assist him, against Luke's wishes. The game periodically cuts between Jacob's pursuit of Luke through the African jungle and flashbacks to the earlier hunting trip in Alaska with Jacob, Luke, and their father, where Jacob saved Luke's life from a pack of wolves and the three of them first encountered the scar-faced grizzly bear that would later kill their father. Jacob ultimately enters an ancient ruined city, where he encounters the black lion and its pride. Luke is dragged off by the black lion, but Jacob succeeds in defeating the beast and saving his brother. Mirroring their encounter with the grizzly 10 years earlier, Jacob chooses to pull his brother up a cliff instead of taking the final shot on the black lion; however, he still manages to kill the lion after saving his brother.
narrative location
36,886
114,799
[ "Hommage à Noir", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Hommage à Noir<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,800
[ "The Last Face", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Last Face<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Plot Wren Peterson is a physician and activist working in West Africa with the organization Doctors of the World that her late father started many years ago. She is happy to lead the organization, but frequently finds herself negatively comparing herself to her father's achievements. In 2003, Wren meets Miguel, a handsome surgeon who has also devoted himself to treating people from impoverished and war-torn sections of the world. The two fall in love but Wren soon discovers that Miguel has had a prior sexual relationship with her cousin, which contributes to the decay of their relationship.
narrative location
36,887
114,801
[ "I Am with You (1948 film)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>I Am with You (1948 film)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. I Am with You (Swedish: Jag är med eder...) is a 1948 Swedish drama film directed by Gösta Stevens and starring Victor Sjöström, Rune Lindström and Nils Dahlgren. It was shot at the Råsunda Studios in Stockholm. The film's sets were designed by the art director Nils Svenwall. Location shooting took place around Victoria Falls and the Mberengwa District. It received backing from the Church of Sweden and was picked up for American distribution the following year.Synopsis Helge Tellberg leaves Sweden with his wife and young son to become a missionary in Southern Rhodesia.
narrative location
36,888
114,802
[ "Virunga (film)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Virunga (film)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Virunga is a 2014 British documentary film directed by Orlando von Einsiedel. It focuses on the conservation work of park rangers within the Congo's Virunga National Park during the rise of the violent M23 Rebellion in 2012 and investigates the activity of the British oil company Soco International within the UNESCO World Heritage Site. Soco International ended up officially exploring oil opportunities in Virunga in April 2014. The film premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival on 17 April 2014. After airing on Netflix, it was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature.Synopsis The documentary tells the story of four characters fighting to protect Virunga National Park in the Democratic Republic of Congo, home to the world's last mountain gorillas, from war, poaching, and the threat of oil exploration. Following gorilla caregiver André Bauma, central sector warden Rodrigue Mugaruka Katembo, chief warden Emmanuel de Merode, and the French investigative journalist Mélanie Gouby, the film focuses on the natural beauty and biodiversity of Virunga, as well as the complex political and economic issues surrounding oil exploration and armed conflict in the region.Production Production began in 2012, when von Einsiedel traveled to Virunga National Park in the Democratic Republic of Congo with the intention of documenting the positive progress which had been made by the park authorities in encouraging tourism and development in the region. However, within three weeks of arriving in Virunga, conflict began with the M23 rebellion in April 2012, shifting the focus of the film to cover the emerging conflict. Von Einsiedel collaborated with park officials and French journalist Mélanie Gouby to investigate the role of the British oil company Soco International, which had been undertaking activities in the area. Undercover filming showed Soco representatives offering bribes to park rangers.Soco International has strongly denied the allegations made in the documentary.
narrative location
36,889
114,803
[ "A Passport to Hell", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>A Passport to Hell<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,806
[ "A United Kingdom", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>A United Kingdom<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. A United Kingdom is a 2016 biographical romantic drama film directed by Amma Asante and written by Guy Hibbert, based on the true-life romance of Seretse Khama, heir to the throne of the Bangwato Tribe in Serowe – one of many tribes found in then Bechuanaland Protectorate –, with his wife Ruth Williams Khama. David Oyelowo and Rosamund Pike portray Seretse and Ruth, respectively. It was screened at the 2016 Toronto International Film Festival, and was the opening film at the 60th London Film Festival.Plot The film is based on the true story of the heir to the throne of Bechuanaland, Seretse Khama of the Bamangwato people, who studied law in London immediately after World War II. There he meets an Englishwoman, Ruth Williams, whom he eventually marries, despite the protests of both their families and opposition from the British government, which is concerned about relations with South Africa and the stability of the entire region of southern Africa. The National Party government in South Africa fears that the marriage of a black king to a white woman in neighboring Bechuanaland will inspire unrest, as it was in the process of making such a marriage illegal, and demands that the British government prevents the marriage, as do the governments of South West Africa and Rhodesia. Khama's uncle, the Regent, also asks Khama to end his marriage and instead marry a Bamangwato princess, which Khama rejects. The British administrators use the dispute to argue that the marriage is causing unrest. Seretse discovers that the British have allowed a US mining corporation to prospect for precious stones, and is eager to make sure that, if anything is found, the exploitation of the country's resources should solely be done by the people of Bechuanaland. Khama wants his people's support and wins their backing, upon which the British government decides to exile him. Meanwhile, Ruth gives birth to their baby and becomes accepted by the local people by "walking the road with them". When the British want to replace the king with an administrator, the tribe refuses to convene the necessary meeting. The British prime minister, Clement Attlee, tells backbencher Tony Benn that Britain needs South Africa's gold and destroying the Khamas' marriage is a price worth paying. Meanwhile, diamonds are found in Bechuanaland and Khama ensures the British government acknowledges their sovereign ownership by the Bechuana people. Winston Churchill promises, if elected, to lift Khama's exile term of five years, but instead makes it permanent. However, powerful people in London and the US government support Khama's case. Meanwhile, apartheid develops in South Africa and begins to overshadow Bechuanaland as well. Eventually, with the help of pressure from local people, he is allowed to return to Bechuanaland and negotiates its independence from the British. Khama shows his uncle a leaked British government document showing he is qualified to be king, and that British government hostility is based only on opposition from South Africa. A postscript reveals that Khama was elected as the first president of present-day Botswana, that their son becomes the country's fourth elected president in 2008 and that Ruth and Khama are buried together on a hilltop overlooking Serowe village, where they had lived for the remainder of their lives.Themes The film explores various themes, including love, racism, imperialism, colonialism, and the struggle for independence. The central plot follows the true story of the interracial marriage between Seretse Khama, the Prince of Bechuanaland (now Botswana), and Ruth Williams, a British office worker, which sparked controversy in both Africa and the United Kingdom. It portrays the couple's fight against racial discrimination and the opposition of the British government, who did not want a mixed-race marriage to threaten their colonial interests. Additionally, the film touches on the power struggle between traditional tribal leaders and the need for modernisation in African nations, the tension between loyalty to one's country and personal desires, and the complex relationship between colonisers and the colonised.
narrative location
36,891
114,807
[ "Operation Red Sea", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Operation Red Sea<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,808
[ "The Lyin' Hunter", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Lyin' Hunter<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,809
[ "Virtual Safari", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Virtual Safari<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Virtual Safari is a 1997 video game developed by Anglia Multimedia and published by Fujitsu Interactive. The game is set in a first-person 3D environment around Africa on a Safari trip to take photographs of animals. The photographs could be submitted to Anglia Multimedia and the best ones would be displayed on their website.Gameplay The player navigates around Three Trees Lodge, acquiring items and solving puzzles. Much of the information required comes from the Colonel. Before the player can pick up items, the rucksack must be obtained. The player's main objective is to get the camera equipment out of the front room chest and take photographs of animals in the wild. Travelling from the lodge to other areas requires the use of the Colonel's car. The player has access to six books with facts about animals and a minigame.
narrative location
36,892
114,810
[ "Operation Crusader (video game)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Operation Crusader (video game)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,811
[ "The Last Victims", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Last Victims<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. The Last Victims is a 2019 political drama film directed by Maynard Kraak. The film was filmed entirely on location in KwaZulu-Natal South Africa and world premiered at the Pan African Film Festival (PAFF) on 8 February 2019. The film then opened the Rapid Lion - South African International Film Festival at the historic Market Theater in Johannesburg, South Africa on 1 March 2019. It screened "in competition" with three nominations: Best Feature Film, Best Cinematography (Meekaaeel Adam) and Best Actor in a Leading Role (Sean Cameron Michael). The film was then selected at 40th Durban International Film Festival (DIFF), Durban South Africa. The film is now selected in competition at Knysna Film Festival, Knysna, South Africa & African Movie Academy Awards (AMAA) in Nigeria. The film is nominated in 3 different section at AMAA viz. Best Screenplay (Sean Robert Daniels), Best Editing (Terwadkar Rajiv & Cohen Lorenzo Davids) & Best Sound (Janno Muller).
narrative location
36,893
114,812
[ "Thank You for the Rain", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Thank You for the Rain<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Thank You for the Rain is a 2017 feature-length documentary film created by Julia Dahr and Kisilu Musya produced by Hugh Hartford. The film follows Kisilu Musya over five years, from small scale farmer to climate activist on a global scale. The film had its world-premiere at Copenhagen International Documentary Festival, and has since toured more than 80 festivals. The film has sold to over 60 countries, earlier versions of the film were bought by Al Jazeera and NRK, and screened at the 2015 United Nations Climate Change Conference in Paris. The film is a co-production between Differ Media and Banyak Films. Five years ago Kisilu, a Kenyan farmer, started to use his camera to capture the life of his family, his village and the damages of climate change. When a violent storm throws him and a Norwegian filmmaker together we see him transform from a father, to community leader to an activist on the global stage. Thank You for the Rain is an inspiring and captivating tale of an indefatigable optimist, who nonetheless tests his limits in the fight for a greener world. Thank You for the Rain is a collaborative film made by Kisilu Musya, a Kenyan farmer, climate fighter and video diarist, and Julia Dahr, a Norwegian filmmaker. Living in completely different parts of the world, Kisilu and Julia found each through this project, and have been working together for more than five years to complete Thank You For The Rain.
narrative location
36,894
114,813
[ "Africa Screams", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Africa Screams<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,814
[ "A Good Man in Africa", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>A Good Man in Africa<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. A Good Man in Africa is a 1994 comedy-drama film, based on William Boyd's 1981 novel A Good Man in Africa and directed by Bruce Beresford. The film starred Colin Friels, Sean Connery, John Lithgow, Joanne Whalley, Diana Rigg and Louis Gossett Jr.Plot Morgan Leafy (Colin Friels) is a British diplomat living in Kinjanja, an African nation which has recently become independent from British rule. Arthur Fanshawe (John Lithgow), a new diplomat eager to leave Africa, learns that Kinjanja sits on top of a huge oil reserve. Unfortunately, Morgan is too preoccupied with alcohol and women to know what to do with the oil. To make matters worse, a woman is struck by lightning on the British compound, creating a tense political situation with the Kinjanja government.
narrative location
36,895
114,815
[ "The Roots of Heaven (film)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Roots of Heaven (film)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Plot In French Equatorial Africa, crusading environmentalist Morel sets out to preserve the elephants from extinction as a lasting symbol of freedom for all humanity. He is helped by Minna, a nightclub hostess, and Forsythe, a disgraced British military officer hoping to redeem himself.Cast Production Development 20th Century Fox bought the film rights the novel in April 1957 for more than $100,000. The novel had sold over 300,000 copies in Europe but had not yet been released in the U.S., where it would become a bestseller. In May, Darryl F. Zanuck announced that he would produce the film independently for Fox (he had a contract with the studio to make films), and wanted John Huston to direct. Zanuck said that the theme of the film was "simple... A man comes to the conclusion that if we don't stop killing people we destroy ourselves." And he says, "Why not start with our biggest companions on earth, the elephants, whose only enemy is man?" He later added:Shooting Shooting took place mainly on location in French Equatorial Africa over five months in the Belgian Congo and Chad in the Northern Cameroons, where the elephants were located. The cast and crew suffered from heat, malaria and other tropical diseases. Temperatures would routinely reach 134 °F (57 °C) in the day and 95 °F (35 °C) degrees at night, and people would shower four or five times per night. Some days required a four-hour drive to the location and back, and all water was transported to the set by aircraft. Juliette Gréco contracted a serious illness and the company reported 900 sick calls from a cast and crew of 120. Flynn mentioned the challenges of the location with affection in his autobiography My Wicked, Wicked Ways (1959). Zanuck said "I would never make a picture there again" but he was proud that "[t]here is not one dubbed line, transparency plate or process shot in the whole picture."The unit then moved to Paris for studio filming. While there, Gréco fell ill with a recurrence of her illness. Flynn also had a recurrence of malaria requiring hospitalization.Welles filmed his part over two days at a Paris studio. His rate was normally $15,000, but he was not paid because he wished to reciprocate Zanuck for helping Welles fund Othello (1952).Huston later said: "I still don't want to have to work with a producer again but if I had to, I'd certainly choose Darryl. He's been very good, co-operative and decent throughout." He also said that he was "completely responsible... for the badness of The Roots of Heaven. I really wanted to make that one and Daryl Zanuck got me everything and everybody I wanted. But I had the screenplay done by someone who had never done one before, and it was bad. By then the cast, crew and me were in Africa; it was too late to turn back, we would have spent a fortune for nothing, so we went ahead and did the best we could."
narrative location
36,897
114,817
[ "The Roots of Heaven (film)", "narrative location", "French Equatorial Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Roots of Heaven (film)<\e1> and <e2>French Equatorial Africa<\e2>. Plot In French Equatorial Africa, crusading environmentalist Morel sets out to preserve the elephants from extinction as a lasting symbol of freedom for all humanity. He is helped by Minna, a nightclub hostess, and Forsythe, a disgraced British military officer hoping to redeem himself.Shooting Shooting took place mainly on location in French Equatorial Africa over five months in the Belgian Congo and Chad in the Northern Cameroons, where the elephants were located. The cast and crew suffered from heat, malaria and other tropical diseases. Temperatures would routinely reach 134 °F (57 °C) in the day and 95 °F (35 °C) degrees at night, and people would shower four or five times per night. Some days required a four-hour drive to the location and back, and all water was transported to the set by aircraft. Juliette Gréco contracted a serious illness and the company reported 900 sick calls from a cast and crew of 120. Flynn mentioned the challenges of the location with affection in his autobiography My Wicked, Wicked Ways (1959). Zanuck said "I would never make a picture there again" but he was proud that "[t]here is not one dubbed line, transparency plate or process shot in the whole picture."The unit then moved to Paris for studio filming. While there, Gréco fell ill with a recurrence of her illness. Flynn also had a recurrence of malaria requiring hospitalization.Welles filmed his part over two days at a Paris studio. His rate was normally $15,000, but he was not paid because he wished to reciprocate Zanuck for helping Welles fund Othello (1952).Huston later said: "I still don't want to have to work with a producer again but if I had to, I'd certainly choose Darryl. He's been very good, co-operative and decent throughout." He also said that he was "completely responsible... for the badness of The Roots of Heaven. I really wanted to make that one and Daryl Zanuck got me everything and everybody I wanted. But I had the screenplay done by someone who had never done one before, and it was bad. By then the cast, crew and me were in Africa; it was too late to turn back, we would have spent a fortune for nothing, so we went ahead and did the best we could."
narrative location
36,898
114,818
[ "Congo (film)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Congo (film)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Congo is a 1995 American science fiction action-adventure film based on the 1980 novel by Michael Crichton. It was directed by Frank Marshall and stars Laura Linney, Dylan Walsh, Ernie Hudson, Grant Heslov, Joe Don Baker and Tim Curry. The film was released on June 9, 1995, by Paramount Pictures. It received negative reviews, but performed better than expected at the box office.Plot While searching for rare blue diamonds that could lead to a new revolutionary communications laser, TraviCom employees Charles Travis and Jeffrey Weems discover the ruins of a lost city near a volcanic site in a remote part of the Congo jungle. Karen Ross, Charles's ex-fiancée and a former CIA operative, and R. B. Travis, Charles's father and the CEO of TraviCom, lose contact with the team while tracking their progress at the company headquarters. Activating a remote camera, they find the camp destroyed and strewn with corpses, as well as a savage ape-like creature that destroys the camera. Travis asks Karen to lead another expedition to the site. Meanwhile, Peter Elliott, a primatologist at the University of California, Berkeley, and his assistant Richard teach human communication to primates using a mountain gorilla named Amy. With a specialized backpack and glove, her sign language is translated to a digitized voice. Despite the success, Peter is concerned by Amy's drawings of jungles and the Eye of Providence, and seeks funding to return her to Africa, but the university is reluctant. Romanian philanthropist Herkermer Homolka offers to fund the expedition, and Karen asks permission to join it since her visas will be invalid unless connected to such a venture. Peter is hesitant at first, seeing Amy's jealousy of Karen, but allows her to join and pay part of the expenses after Homolka is unable to provide funding. The group flies to Africa and lands in Uganda, where they meet wilderness guide Monroe Kelly. They are detained and questioned by Captain Wanta, a local military leader, who warns them not to trust Homolka and lets them proceed only after Karen pays him a large bribe. As the group crosses to Tanzania to board another plane that will take them to Zaire, Monroe reveals that Homolka has led previous safaris in search of the "Lost City of Zinj", with disastrous results. The group parachutes into the jungle just before their plane is shot down by Zairean soldiers. On the ground, they encounter a native tribe that leads them to Bob Driscoll, a wounded member of Charles's expedition. On seeing Amy approaching, Bob begins screaming in fear and soon dies. The group continues by boat, and learn that Homolka, in search of Zinj and its fabled diamond mine, believes that Amy's drawings suggest she has seen the mine and can lead them to it. After an attack by massive hippos, they find the ruined camp and the nearby City of Zinj. Richard and a couple of porters are killed by a vicious grey gorilla. The group take shelter at the ruined camp, keeping other gorillas at bay with automated sentry guns and detectors. When day breaks, they find Homolka, several porters and Amy missing. They return to the city, where they find Homolka exploring, and surmise from hieroglyphs that the city's inhabitants specially bred the grey gorillas, encouraging their violent tendencies to guard the mine and kill anyone looking to steal the diamonds. The group suspects the gorillas turned on their masters yet still continue to protect the mine. They find the mine and are faced with a troop of grey gorillas. Homolka begins to collect diamonds, but is soon cornered and killed by some of the apes. Monroe, Karen and Peter flee deeper into the mine, where they discover Jeffrey and Charles's bodies with the latter still holding a giant blue diamond in hand. As Amy protects Peter, Monroe fends off the other gorillas until Karen can fit the diamond into a portable laser, allowing her to power it up and kill several gorillas. The volcano begins to erupt, and the four escape as the city is flooded with lava, killing the gorillas. Once safe, Karen reports to Travis on finding the diamond and confirming Charles's death. Realizing Travis was only interested in the diamond, she uses her laser to destroy the TraviCom satellite. In the nearby wreckage of another one of Travis's expedition cargo planes they had found earlier, they find a hot-air balloon, and prepare to leave. Peter sees Amy with a troop of gorillas and bids her goodbye. The three take off in the balloon, and Peter throws the diamond back into the jungle below. Amy watches the departing balloon with a smile, then joins her new gorilla family.
narrative location
36,899
114,819
[ "The Ten Commandments (1956 film)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Ten Commandments (1956 film)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,822
[ "Le Boulet", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Le Boulet<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,823
[ "War Witch", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>War Witch<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Cast Production Montreal director Kim Nguyen wrote the screenplay over a period of 10 years, inspired by an article about children in Burma leading a rebellion force. In researching the film, Nguyen met real child soldiers and humanitarian staff. He envisioned his project as "a redemption story about a child who lives through war and peace."War Witch was primarily filmed in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Nguyen discovered Rachel Mwanza and numerous other child actors for his cast in Kinshasa, DRC, after open auditions. Mwanza had never acted before, and was 15 by September 2012. Nguyen said that "Rachel was living in the streets before we did the film". Besides the novice Congolese actors, professional Canadian actors joined the cast.Most of War Witch was filmed in the order of the story. It was only the second film shot in the DRC in 25 years, and due to security concerns, the crew was accompanied by soldiers with AK-47s, and insurance was challenging to obtain.
narrative location
36,901
114,824
[ "Sniper (1993 film)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Sniper (1993 film)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,825
[ "King of Jazz", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>King of Jazz<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,827
[ "Beau Geste (1939 film)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Beau Geste (1939 film)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,828
[ "Tarzan Escapes", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Tarzan Escapes<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,830
[ "Sahara (1983 film)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Sahara (1983 film)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Sahara is a 1983 British-American adventure drama film directed by Andrew McLaglen and starring Brooke Shields, Lambert Wilson, Horst Buchholz, John Rhys-Davies and John Mills. The original music score was composed by Ennio Morricone.Plot In 1928, Gordon develops a new racing vehicle, a hot rod, but dies in a practice run before he can compete in the 'Trans-African Auto Race'. To save her father's dream, and win the prize money, Gordon's flapper daughter, Dale disguises herself as a man and takes the place of her father in the race through the Sahara Desert, with the help of her father's friends. Dale is an excellent driver and has a good chance to win the male-only race. After she crosses the start line, she takes off her wig and mustache and reveals her true sex to the other participants in the race. While taking a short-cut, she comes close to a tribal war between Bedouin factions. Another racer, the German Von Glessing, also takes the same short-cut in order to supply weapons to the evil leader of the two warring tribes. Dale and her crew are captured by Rasoul, the uncle of the good leader of the warring tribes. The good leader, Sheikh Jaffar, had seen Dale from afar and desired her, so he rescues her from his uncle by claiming Dale as his bride. Dale marries Jaffar and escapes the next morning in her car to attempt to finish the race. She is captured by the evil leader before she can complete the race, but a stowaway gypsy child runs back to Jaffar to tell him of Dale's capture. Meanwhile, Dale is thrown into a pit of leopards. Jaffar rallies his men, rescues her and allows her to return to drive in the race. Dale wins the race, and when celebrating sees Jaffar's horse nearby. She bids farewell to her crew, mounts the horse, and returns to Jaffar.
narrative location
36,904
114,832
[ "Black and White in Color", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Black and White in Color<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Black and White in Color (French: La Victoire en chantant, then Noirs et Blancs en couleur for the 1977 re-issue) is a French-Ivorian 1976 war film and black comedy directed by Jean-Jacques Annaud in his directorial debut. The film is set in the African theater of World War I, during the French invasion of the German colony of Kamerun. The film adopts a strong antimilitaristic point of view, and is noteworthy for ridiculing the French side even more harshly than their German counterparts. The original French title is the first four words (the first line) of the song Le Chant du départ, a French military song. It won the 1976 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film; it was submitted to the Académie de Côte d'Ivoire, resulting in that country's first and only Oscar.Plot The film opens in 1915 in a remote French outpost located in the African colony of Cameroon. The French colonists, consisting of a small group of settlers, have been living a tranquil and isolated life, completely oblivious to the raging World War I happening far away in Europe. Their main preoccupation is maintaining a comfortable and leisurely existence. One day, a British soldier named Gabriel Fouquet (played by Jean Carmet) arrives at the outpost, bringing the news of the war. The colonists, including the plantation owner De Sorgue (played by Jean Dufilho), his wife Lucie (played by Catherine Rouvel), and other colorful characters, are initially dismissive of the news, believing it to be irrelevant to their lives. However, as the reality of the war begins to sink in, the French colonists decide to take action against the Germans, who are the colonial rulers in neighboring Togoland. They view it as an opportunity to demonstrate their patriotism and loyalty to France. The colonists gather their resources and organize a comical and misadventurous campaign against the Germans. Led by De Sorgue and Sergeant Bosselet (played by Jacques Spiesser), the motley crew of colonists embarks on a journey through the African wilderness, encountering various obstacles and challenges along the way. They face not only the harsh conditions of the environment but also cultural clashes and misunderstandings as they interact with African tribes. Despite their bumbling and amateurish attempts at war, the French colonists manage to cause some disruption to the Germans, leading to a series of humorous and unexpected situations. The film uses satire and irony to underscore the futility and absurdity of war and colonialism. As the story unfolds, the colonists gradually come to realize the true nature of war and the complexities of the colonial system. The film juxtaposes the innocence and naivety of the colonists with the harsh realities of the conflict, challenging their romanticized notions of heroism and patriotism.
narrative location
36,905
114,834
[ "Coast of Skeletons", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Coast of Skeletons<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Plot Following independence, the unnamed British colony where Commissioner Harry Sanders has been working for many years sacks its British police force. So Sanders returns to London, where he soon finds work for an insurance company, which wants him to oversee a project to dredge for diamonds in the shallow waters off South West Africa. Sanders soon finds himself drawn into a web of insurance fraud, a secret hunt for World War II gold bullion, and a rivalrous love triangle between a flamboyant American diamond prospector, a former German U-boat commander in the employ of the American, and the German’s very young wife.
narrative location
36,906
114,835
[ "Kiss the Other Sheik", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Kiss the Other Sheik<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,837
[ "West of Zanzibar (1928 film)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>West of Zanzibar (1928 film)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,838
[ "Five Weeks in a Balloon (film)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Five Weeks in a Balloon (film)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,839
[ "The Last Flight (2009 film)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Last Flight (2009 film)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>.
narrative location
32,091
114,841
[ "The Lost World (1992 film)", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Lost World (1992 film)<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. The Lost World is a 1992 film, based on the 1912 novel The Lost World by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. The movie is set in Africa rather than the book's setting of South America, and the character of Lord John Roxton has been replaced with a female character played by Tamara Gorski (in her film debut). It was followed by a sequel the same year, Return to the Lost World, with the same director and main cast.Plot The film opens on Edward Malone, a junior reporter looking for an adventurous assignment. Malone is sent to interview Professor Challenger, an explorer and researcher who believes he is on the trail of the "lost world," a mysterious place in Central Africa. Challenger has a picture of a cliff and a strange beast resembling a pterodactyl that is his only evidence of the place. The British scientific community finds his claims laughable. After receiving funding from the family of Jenny Nielson, a wildlife photographer and the daughter of a rich American contributor to the sciences, the "scientific community" agrees to organise an exploratory expedition under the leadership of the antagonistic Professor Summerlee. Summerlee agrees to Malone and Nielson coming on the expedition, but refuses to allow Challenger to be part of the expedition. With obvious reluctance, Challenger gives Summerlee a "map" to be opened at a road-end village in Africa at a particular date and time. The expedition departs. A newsboy associate of Malone named Jim stows away on the trip. The expedition arrives in Africa where they are joined by a female guide named Malu and a Portuguese called Gomez. Summerlee opens the map from Challenger, finding it blank, at which point Challenger appears from nowhere leaving Summerlee no option but to accept his guidance on the expedition. Under Challenger's guidance they find the cliff in the picture and reach the top, but Gomez (who turns out to be the brother of a Portuguese who was killed on Challenger's first journey here) strands them with no way back down. Exploring the Lost World to find another way home, the team finds dinosaurs, from a pair of Anatotitan to a pterodactyl rookery. Jim, Malone, and Malu narrowly avoid being eaten by a dinosaur (presumably a Herrerasaurus), only to find that their camp was attacked and the rest of the team is gone. The three discover a gathering of native tribesmen (painted with symbolic skeletons) who regularly sacrifice humans off a cliff to the carnivorous dinosaurs. While the 'skeleton men' sacrifice a man to a Tyrannosaurus Rex, Malone distracts the tribe while the other explorers and captured natives escape, and they retreat to the safety of a second tribe nearby (who use clothes, not paint). During these events, Summerlee notes some oddities about the "ritual" vegetation necklaces that the sacrifices (themselves) were dressed in. The second tribe's members, through Malu's translation, tell the explorers about a time long ago when the shamans of their tribe convinced some to worship the carnivorous dinosaurs, splitting the tribe in two. Summerlee deduces that the vegetation necklaces placed on the sacrifices provided some necessary nutrient or immunisation to the dinosaurs which had protected these dinosaurs from the extinction that the rest of the dinosaurs suffered globally (this being a theory Summerlee had espoused previously). The expedition team uses their modern knowledge and research to benefit the tribe with irrigation and horticultural benefits, to produce the antidote to a prehistoric plague. The skeleton tribe's leader is killed, and the two tribes reunite. The chief shows the team a hidden cave that will lead them back to their world, and has them promise that they will come back if they are ever needed. Returning to the river, the team is ambushed by Gomez. Gomez is shot and wounded, but instead of killing him, Challenger leaves him behind, saying, "Let the jungle have him." Malu stays in Africa, and the others return home. The Royal Zoological Society in London rules that Challenger and Summerlee have insufficient evidence of their tale, until Jim reveals that he brought back a baby pterodactyl. The team is celebrated for their achievements, but when Malone, Jenny, and Jim discover the pterodactyl (named Percival), is unhappy being kept in a zoo, they release him, allowing him to fly back to the "lost world".
narrative location
36,909
114,843
[ "The Famished Road", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Famished Road<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. The Famished Road is a novel by Nigerian author Ben Okri, the first book in a trilogy that continues with Songs of Enchantment (1993) and Infinite Riches (1998). Published in London in 1991 by Jonathan Cape, The Famished Road follows Azaro, an abiku, or spirit child, living in an unnamed African (most likely Nigerian) city. The novel employs a unique narrative style, incorporating the spirit world with the "real" world in what some have classified as animist realism. Others have labelled the book African traditional religion realism, while still others choose simply to call the novel fantasy literature. The book exploits the belief in the coexistence of the spiritual and material worlds that is a defining aspect of traditional African life. The Famished Road was awarded the Booker Prize for Fiction for 1991, making Okri the youngest ever winner of the prize at the age of 32.
narrative location
36,911
114,846
[ "Africa Speaks!", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Africa Speaks!<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Africa Speaks! is a 1930 American documentary film directed by Walter Futter and narrated by Lowell Thomas. It is an exploitation film.Premise Paul L. Hoefler heads a 1928 expedition to Africa capturing wildlife and tribes on film.Production Although the film was shot over the fourteen months of the expedition in the Serengeti and in Uganda, a scene involving an attack by a lion on a native was apparently staged at the Selig Zoo in Los Angeles and involved a toothless lion.Hoefler wrote a book entitled Africa Speaks about the expedition that was published in 1931.
narrative location
36,912
114,847
[ "Kennedy's Brain", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Kennedy's Brain<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Kennedy's Brain is a novel by Swedish writer Henning Mankell, that was originally published in the Swedish language in 2005. The English translation by Laurie Thompson was published in September, 2007. With some elements similar to those of John le Carré's The Constant Gardner, Mankell's novel addresses the African HIV/AIDS epidemic, the pharmaceutical industry, and greed centered on the African epidemic. The protagonist is Louise Cantor, a Swedish archaeologist who on returning home from an excavation in Greece makes a tragic discovery. Louise embarks on a search for answers to explain why the tragedy has occurred. Her journey takes her to Australia, to Spain and to Mozambique.
narrative location
36,913
114,848
[ "Road to Zanzibar", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Road to Zanzibar<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Road to Zanzibar is a 1941 Paramount Pictures semi-musical comedy film starring Bing Crosby, Bob Hope, and Dorothy Lamour, and marked the second of seven pictures in the popular "Road to …" series made by the trio. It takes place in the Sultanate of Zanzibar.
narrative location
36,914
114,850
[ "The Naked Earth", "narrative location", "Africa" ]
Find the relation between <e1>The Naked Earth<\e1> and <e2>Africa<\e2>. Plot The action takes place at the end of the nineteenth century, in East Africa. Danny Halloran, a Briton, comes to find a friend tobacco farmer but fails to do so. He discovers that the farmer died leaving a widow, Maria. Danny falls in love with the young woman and decides to marry her and take over the plantation. When the harvest fails, he goes hunting for crocodiles to trade their skins.Cast Richard Todd as Danny Juliette Gréco as Maria John Kitzmiller as David Finlay Currie as Father Verity Laurence Naismith as Skin Trader Christopher Rhodes as Al Orlando Martins as Tribesman Harold Kasket as Arab Captain
narrative location
36,915
114,851