Chicago Sun-Times

ROYAL TREATMENT

Captivatin­g Netflix docuseries traces a 17th century African queen’s crafty, deadly rise to power

- BY RICHARD ROEPER, MOVIE COLUMNIST rroeper@suntimes.com | @RichardERo­eper

Way back in the early days of television, there was a series on CBS called “You Are There,” hosted by Walter Cronkite. The gimmick had Cronkite anchoring a newscast about historical events, with reallife CBS news reporters in their modern-day, 20th century garb showing up at historical events to report on the sidelines and interview actors who portrayed the likes of Plato, Anne Boleyn, Harriet Tubman and Paul Revere in their respective time periods.

I was reminded of “You Are There” while screening the Netflix four-part documentar­y series “African Queens: Njinga,” an enlighteni­ng and captivatin­g and invaluable deep dive into the life and times of Njinga, the 17th century warrior queen who ruled what is now known as Angola. Not that the series invokes the technique of dropping modern-day correspond­ents into a historical setting, but “African Queens: Njinga” does take a rather unorthodox (though not unpreceden­ted) approach in that about 80% of the series is a straightfo­rward historical drama, with a fine cast portraying Njinga and other key figures from the time, and the other 20% consists of traditiona­l, talking-head, oncamera interviews with scholars and historians who provide rich context and keep us up to speed as we transition from scene to scene.

Narrated by executive producer Jada Pinkett Smith and benefiting greatly from the writing of Peres Owino and NneNne Iwuji, “African Queens: Njinga” at times feels a little bit like homework — but it’s a subject well worth our attention, and a lesson plan executed in wellpaced, entertaini­ng fashion.

Episode One takes us to 1617 and the kingdom of Ndongo in West Africa (filming actually took place in South Africa), where the Princess Njinga (Adesuwa Oni) is working on her fighting technique under the watchful eye of her father, King Ngola (Thabo Bopape), who favors Njinga over all his grown children, including his sons. As the anthropolo­gist and writer Luke Pepera explains, “The Portuguese have already been in Ndongo for 50 years” as a maritime superpower, periodical­ly capturing and enslaving people to work on sugar plantation­s in Brazil. Says University of Chicago Assistant Professor Mary Hicks: “Their mission is really twofold. One is to Christiani­ze the people there, and the other is to really expand the territory of the King of Portugal.”

After the king is killed by one of his own generals, the king’s son Mbande (Philips Nortey), halfbrothe­r to Njinga, stages a horrific and bloody coup to kill all potential heirs to the throne, including Njinga’s own infant son. Though devastated and nearly paralyzed with grief, Njinga remains allies with the ruthless and bullheaded Mbande, for the good of the people. She persuades Mbande to send her on a mission to form an alliance with a group of mercenary warriors who are known as the Imbangla and are led by the fierce but practical Kasa (Thabo Rametsi), who agrees to the alliance. This is the first of many representa­tions of Njinga as a sophistica­ted and practical tactician.

Although the jazzy score and sometimes melodramat­ic and anachronis­tic dialogue occasional­ly take us out of the moment (“Peace isn’t even on the table yet,” Njinga notes during a negotiatin­g session with the Portuguese), “African Queens” keeps us involved and heats up the often violence-soaked drama in subsequent episodes. The beleaguere­d and desperate King Mbande sees his people constantly under siege and eventually flees the city as it falls to the Portuguese. After Njinga successful­ly negotiates a truce with the Portuguese that will help ensure Ndongo’s survival, she returns home a conquering hero, captivatin­g the people and earning their respect on a level Mbande has never known.

When Mbande dies, he leaves behind a 7-year-old son. Until the boy is capable of taking over, Njinga is declared Queen Regent — and in the most chilling scene in the entire series, Njinga has her nephew’s throat slit, thus eliminatin­g the heir to the throne, just as Mbande had killed her own son. She reigned for some 37 years.

With a steady stream of historical reportage from historians and writers sprinkled throughout, along with helpful maps and graphics, “African Queens: Njinga” is a well-edited series, as we toggle back and forth between the documentar­y interviews and the fictional scenes, which feature solid production design even though this is clearly not the biggest budget series in the Netflix canon. Njinga gets her due as one of the most formidable powerful warrior-rulers the world has known.

‘AFRICAN QUEENS: NJINGA’ ★★★

A four-part series available Wednesday on Netflix.

 ?? NETFLIX ?? The initial “African Queens” series is dominated by dramatizat­ions starring Adesuwa Oni as the 17th century leader Njinga.
NETFLIX The initial “African Queens” series is dominated by dramatizat­ions starring Adesuwa Oni as the 17th century leader Njinga.

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