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List Price: $59.98Amazon.com's Price: $43.99 You Save: $15.99 (27%)Prices subject to change.
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Aspect Ratio: 2.55:1
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Binding: DVD
EAN: 0085391125358
Format: Box set, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
Label: Warner Home Video
Manufacturer: Warner Home Video
Number Of Items: 4
Publisher: Warner Home Video
Region Code: 1
Release Date: October 09, 2007
Running Time: 688 minutes
Sales Rank: 14626
Studio: Warner Home Video
Theatrical Release Date: February 18, 1979
Editorial Review:
Description: Could there be a worthy follow-up to the most-watched miniseries ever? 'We felt the other did so well,' Alex Haley said, 'that we should just let it hang there.' But Haley began carrying around a tape recorder, dictating more of his family's tales as they came to his memory. Those remembrances filled a 1,000-page transcript: raw material for Roots: The Next Generations. Winner of the Emmy for Best Limited Series, this landmark continuation of a landmark event - with 53 stars and 235 speaking parts - 'is in many respects a superior achievement,' Newsweek said in comparing this to Roots. Twenty-five years later, it has lost none of its dramatic and emotional power to make us confront history and examine ourselves. One man's family remains everyone's!
Amazon.com: Roots rocked the cultural landscape in the late '70s, creating a new wave of awareness of black history. That wave opened the door for its sequel, Roots: The Next Generations, even more of a star-studded event than the original, with stars like Olivia de Havilland, Henry Fonda, Marlon Brando, and James Earl Jones eager to partake in the tale. The sequel follows the rest of the saga of the family of author Alex Haley, from where Roots ended at the Civil War, up to the 1970s when Haley was researching and writing his earth-shattering family story.
While nothing can rival the power of the original Roots' unflinching look at the slave trade and slave life in the early years of this country, the sequel is still full of rich African American history, from Reconstruction, to Jim Crow, to the civil rights movement and the early rumblings of black power. Fonda and de Havilland are respectable in their period-piece roles, but the real power of this sequel is in the more immediate concerns of Haley and his own experience of prejudice while building a stellar reputation as a writer and journalist in the '60s and '70s. One of the most unsettling scenes takes place then, when Haley interviews the head of the American Nazi Party, played with chilling diffidence by Brando. (Brando won an Emmy for this performance.) Haley is also challenged by his fractious interview with Malcolm X (a gripping Al Freeman Jr.). Jones launches his acting career playing Haley with nuance and heart, but with a humanizing set of his own demons.
The four-disc set includes all seven episodes plus a compelling documentary, Roots: The Next Generations--The Legacy Continues, with interviews with Jones, costar and episode director Georg Stanford Brown and a still starry-eyed David L. Wolper, who understands the cultural impact of the two miniseries he helped bring to the screen. --A.T. Hurley
Customer Reviews
Average Rating: 
Rating: - finally on dvd
And about time. Alex Haley's "factional" story is as powerful today as when first released. With the current political goings on in this country, Roots and Roots TNG should be required viewing for every single American.
Rating: - Roots - The Next Generation
I've looked for over a year trying to find this collection. I was shocked and amazed at the clarity and quality of this video collection. It looks like the movie was just made. I highly recommend this video to everyone.
Rating: - Informative and long
I recently watched ROOTS, the original because when I saw it as a child, I really didn't understand what I was watching. After I watched it, I was deeply moved by what black people had gone through. I was anxious to learn of the lives of Chicken George and the family, AFTER they were set free so I purchased ROOTS: The Next Generations.
I wasn't as impressed with this version. I found the casting to be questionable. A child would have coarse hair and dark skin and 20 years later would ... Read More
Rating: - Kunta Kinte - The Second Century
Roots - The Next Generations
Having just finished watching the first series of Roots, I was looking forward to watching the sequel, having last seen it on TV in New Zealand around thirty years ago. While I would hesitate in saying it is better than the original, it holds your attention while covering "less dramatic" times in the Haley family history. The DVD box set totals 688 minutes of viewing, which equates to good value for money. The series follows closely the family history after the move ... Read More
Rating: - roots the next generation
Its good and a part of history. It really makes you mad but you have to think of things now and how different they are today.
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