Amistad 1997 - 152 Min Dramma Вђў Storia Вђў Mi... Apr 2026
Instead, they were tricked. The ship drifted north until it was seized off the coast of Long Island.
They found him in John Quincy Adams. The former president, old and weary, rediscovered his fire as he stood before the Supreme Court. He spoke of the ancestors, of the Declaration of Independence, and the "natural state of man" which is freedom. He argued that if these people were kidnapped, they had every right to use force to regain their liberty.
But the spirit of a lion does not break easily. In the dark of a stormy night in 1839, Cinqué found a loose nail. With the quiet desperation of fifty-three other souls behind him, he picked his locks, seized a machete, and reclaimed the ship. He spared two navigators, demanding they sail back toward the rising sun, toward Africa. Amistad 1997 - 152 min Dramma • Storia • Mi...
As Cinqué stood on the deck of the ship that would finally take him home, he looked back at the American shore. He had arrived in silence and chains, but he left with a voice that had shaken the foundations of a nation, proving that the light of justice, though often delayed, can never be fully extinguished.
Tell me which area interests you, and I can dive deeper into the details! Instead, they were tricked
In a landmark decision, the court agreed. Cinqué and his companions were not rebels or slaves; they were free men.
Suddenly, the battle moved from the blood-slicked decks of a schooner to the cold, mahogany-lined courtrooms of Connecticut. The world watched as a young, idealistic lawyer named Roger Baldwin took up their cause, initially treating it as a simple case of property salvage. But as he looked into Cinqué’s eyes, he realized he wasn't defending cargo—he was defending humanity. The former president, old and weary, rediscovered his
The heavy chains rattled against the wood of the La Amistad as Cinqué looked up at the stars, the only things that still looked familiar in a world turned upside down. Captured from his home in Sierra Leone, he was no longer a man with a name, a family, or a future—he was "property" in the eyes of the Spanish traders who held him.
to add an item to your Itinerary basket.


