The Rose of Rhodesia

  • 71'
  • South Africa
  • 1917
The discovery of this lost film made archival news this year. Harold Shaw's final production in Africa involves the theft of a diamond from a Rhodesian mining concern. The diamond is called ‘the rose of Rhodesia’, but Rose is also the name of a prospector’s daughter (Edna Flugrath, Mrs. Shaw), whose attractions, first to the diamond thief, and secondly to a missionary’s son, account for the melodrama.
But the film is distinguished in particular by its portrayal of Africans and how inter-racial relations become the film’s real interest: the hero is friendly with Mofti, son of the chieftan Ushakapilla, and a white rose is given as a symbol of their friendship. Ushakapilla is planning an uprising against white rule but after Mofti’s accidental death, Ushakapilla relents. The progressive view of Africans offered in The Rose... would not appear in South African cinema for many years thereafter.

  • 71'
  • South Africa
  • 1917
Director
Harold M. Shaw
Country of production
South Africa
Year
1917
Festival Edition
IFFR 2010
Length
71'
Medium
35mm
Screenplay
Harold Shaw
Cinematography
Henry Howse, Ernest Palmer
Cast
Edna Flugrath
Director
Harold M. Shaw
Country of production
South Africa
Year
1917
Festival Edition
IFFR 2010
Length
71'
Medium
35mm
Screenplay
Harold Shaw
Cinematography
Henry Howse, Ernest Palmer
Cast
Edna Flugrath