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February 13, 2012

Home > Movies > Reviews > 2006
The Last King of Scotland






The Last King of Scotland

Our rating: 3 Stars - Good Your rating:


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MPAA rating: R
(for some strong violence and gruesome images, sexual content and language)

Genre: Drama, Historical

Theater release:
September 27, 2006
by Fox Searchlight

Directed by: Kevin Macdonald

Runtime: 2 hours 1 minutes

Cast: James McAvoy (Nicholas Garrigan), Forest Whitaker (Idi Amin), Kerry Washington (Kay Amin), Gillian Anderson (Sarah Merrit), Simon McBurney (Nigel Stone), David Oyelowo (Dr. Junju), Abby Mukiibi (Masanga), David Ashton (Dr. Garrigan)

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Don't let the title fool you. The Last King of Scotland takes place not in the Highlands but in Uganda, and the title refers not to some European monarch but to one of the most notorious African dictators, Idi Amin. So why do this film—and the Giles Foden novel on which it is based—bear this title? Partly because "King of Scotland" was one of the many titles Amin gave himself during his brutal eight-year reign; another was "Conqueror of the British Empire." Amin, who rose through the ranks of the British colonial army under the patronage of Scottish officers before Uganda became independent, was a fan of all things Scottish, and sometimes wore kilts in public.

The film is also told from the point of view of Nicholas Garrigan (James McAvoy, last seen as Mister Tumnus in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe), a Scotsman who has just earned his medical degree, and who goes to Africa to get away from his stern father and to have some "fun"—having sex with total strangers, treating the odd patient, and soaking in the anti-English, anti-colonial atmosphere. When Nicholas first arrives in Uganda, he hears that Amin has just taken over the country in a coup, but the locals tell him not to worry; and the first time he sees Idi Amin (Forest Whitaker) himself, at a political rally surrounded by supporters and tribal dancers, he is impressed by the leader's charisma.

James McAvoy as the young physician Nicholas Garrigan
James McAvoy as the young physician Nicholas Garrigan

At this point, Garrigan is working at a mission with a pair of doctors whose marriage seems to be a little strained, and for a while, Garrigan befriends and even tries to seduce the female half of this couple (The X-Files' Gillian Anderson). But an unexpected roadside encounter with Amin, his bodyguards, and a wounded cow quickly sends Garrigan's life spinning in another direction. Amin, impressed by the foreigner's willfulness—and by his Scottishness!—makes Garrigan his personal physician, and treats him to all the pleasures that come with high office.

Ironically, because he is so close to Amin, it takes Garrigan a while to realize the extent to which Amin is, in fact, a murderous tyrant. The dictator, as played by Whitaker, is so disarmingly amusing at first—swapping shirts with Garrigan, teasing him about his hair, even asking him to ensure that no one else will hear about an embarrassing minor ailment or two—that it takes some time to notice the menace lurking beneath the smile. There are moments of violence, both distant and up close, but Garrigan accepts the explanation that the blame for this lies with the previous ruler, who he never knew. A British diplomat (Simon McBurney) warns Garrigan that Amin is worse than he seems, but Garrigan dismisses the information, convinced that the English are just making it up because they resent losing their Empire.

Garrigan and his fellow physician Sarah Merrit (Gillian Anderson)
Garrigan and his fellow physician Sarah Merrit (Gillian Anderson)

But then Amin crosses that line that separates the amusing from the truly insane. His declaration that he cannot be killed because God revealed to him the day that he would die is one thing—a harmless show of confidence, perhaps—but then he declares that God has told him to expel all Asians (mostly Indians) from Uganda, a racist act that devastates the country's economy. Eventually, even Garrigan can no longer avoid the fact that Amin is responsible for a series of utterly barbaric atrocities—and by then, Garrigan is basically trapped and afraid for his own life.

The Last King of Scotland is reminiscent of All the King's Men, at least insofar as both films concern a son of privilege who forsakes his upbringing and hooks up with a charismatic leader from the lower classes—only to find that the new boss is at least as bad as the old bosses. The difference is, Garrigan is a much shallower figure; instead of an idealist who witnesses the corruption of everything he held dear, he is a hedonist who is confronted by the depths of his own self-centered naiveté.

Forest Whitaker as the tyrannical Idi Amin
Forest Whitaker as the tyrannical Idi Amin

This film marks the first dramatic feature from director Kevin Macdonald, whose work so far has been in the field of documentaries; he won wide acclaim for Touching the Void, a film about a hiking accident that could have turned out much, much worse than it did, as well as an Oscar for One Day in September, a riveting account of the Munich Olympics hostage crisis. (Incidentally, one narrative element that is common to Scotland and September is Palestinian terrorists who sought refuge in Africa.)




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