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Extra Bitter: The Story of the Chocolate Islands


Numéro de catalogue:  MUME09
Producteur:  Mushkeg Media Inc.
Agences de production:  Nutaaq Media Inc. and DEH Vertongen Inc.
Sujet:  Documentaire
Langue:  Anglais
Niveau scolaire:  9 - 12, Post-secondaire, Adulte
Pays d'origine:  Canada
Année du droit d’auteur:  2000
Durée:  52:00


Demande de pré-visionnement

Scarred by 500 years of slavery and colonial plunder, the islands of São Tomé and Principe are an enigma. Located off the West coast of Africa, they may be the most obscure country in the world. Many maps of Africa don't even show them. Once famous as major suppliers of cocoa, the diminutive islands haven't been heard of for a long time, not since the turn of the last century. They became independent almost by accident when Portugal pulled out of its crumbling African empire in 1975.

It is, by all accounts, a strange place, spectacular in its insignificance. "Stories from the Chocolate Islands" explores the country and its often mystifying history in a series of short portraits. Together they show the long term consequences of colonialism. The extraordinary setting tells part of the story: abandoned cocoa estates, overgrown railways, collapsed jetties, closed hospitals and the sleepiest of airports.

The film brings back to life chocolate tycoon William Cadbury who visited the islands in 1908 to investigate reports of thinly disguised slavery. Cadbury's subsequent boycott of Sao TomÈ cocoa had unintended consequences: it helped trigger the decline of the islands,  a decline which hasn't been reversed to this day.

The documentary also looks at present-day São Tomé: stories of islanders who somehow manage to survive in a devastated economy.



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