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Amazing Grace

Amazing Grace

  • Status: Released
  • 16-09-2006
  • Runtime: 117 min
  • Score: 6.9
  • Vote count: 310

The true story of William Wilberforce and his courageous quest to end the British slave trade. Along the way, Wilberforce meets intense opposition, but his minister urges him to see the cause through.

Ioan Gruffudd

William Wilberforce

Romola Garai

Barbara Spooner

Benedict Cumberbatch

William Pitt

Albert Finney

John Newton

Michael Gambon

Lord Charles Fox

Rufus Sewell

Thomas Clarkson

Youssou N'Dour

Olaudah Equiano

Ciarán Hinds

Lord Tarleton

Toby Jones

Duke of Clarence

Nicholas Farrell

Henry Thornton

Sylvestra Le Touzel

Marianne Thornton

Jeremy Swift

Richard the Butler

Stephen Campbell Moore

James Stephen

Bill Paterson

Lord Dundas

Nicholas Day

Sir William Dolben

Georgie Glen

Hannah More

Nicholas Woodeson

Harrison

Tom Fisher

John Ramsay

Richard Ridings

Speaker of the House

David Hunt

Lord Camden

David Toole

Beggar

Alex Blake

Heckler

Angie Wallis

Marjorie

Harry Audley

Edward Hope (Quaker)

Chris Barnes

Michael Shaw (Quaker)

Tom Knight

Physician

Andrew Whipp

MP 1

Andrew Neil

MP 2

Estelle Morgan

Maid

Philip Dunbar

Camber

Adam Woodroffe

Parliamentary Clerk

Joseph Traynor

Newton's Secretary

Simon Delaney

Young Parliamentary Officer

Neville Phillips

Old Parliamentary Official

Eki Maria

Young African Woman

Daniel Naprous

Delivery Coach Driver

Peter White

Delivery Assistant

Andres Gomez

The cut is a little bit tangled making hard to follow every hop in time. Otherwise, script and photography are good and the cast does a good job.

CinemaSerf

Aside from a few charismatic scenes from Sir Michael Gambon as the sagely if rather devious Foreign Secretary Lord Edward Fox, the rest of this really struggles to elevate itself from the doldrums of it's rather dreary cast. It possibly doesn't help that much of the drama is set in a wet and gloomy 19th century England but Ioan Gruffudd as the pioneering abolitionist William Wilberforce comes across as weedy and lacklustre. The same can be said for Benedict Cumberbatch's Prime Minister William Pitt and for the most part this felt like a chronological history lesson instead of a drama that enthused me with the controversial issues of a debate that took all but a decade to reach a meaningful parliamentary vote. There is little of substance to what debate there was and whilst the film makes no bones about the position it takes, it does not flesh out the arguments out using rigorous discussion or characterisation to help illustrate just why it all took so long; just why the populace were indifferent to these atrocities. I found that this just overly relied on our own repugnance for the subject matter to bother developing the themes interestingly and provocatively - and I found myself struggling with it as it neared the two hour mark. A serious biopic of this visionary and dedicated man and of his friends and of his opponents would certainly make for compelling viewing - sadly, though, this isn't that!