'Amistad' (1997)

Limited edition giclee printed on photo rag 308 gsm fine art paper

drama history


'Amistad' (1997) - film-art
'Amistad' (1997) - film-art
'Amistad' (1997) - film-art
'Amistad' (1997) - film-art
'Amistad' (1997) - film-art
'Amistad' (1997) - film-art
'Amistad' (1997) - film-art
'Amistad' (1997) - film-art
'Amistad' (1997) - film-art
'Amistad' (1997) - film-art
'Amistad' (1997) - film-art
'Amistad' (1997) - film-art
'Amistad' (1997) - film-art
'Amistad' (1997) - film-art
'Amistad' (1997) - film-art
'Amistad' (1997) - film-art
'Amistad' (1997) - film-art
'Amistad' (1997) - film-art
'Amistad' (1997) - film-art
'Amistad' (1997) - film-art
'Amistad' (1997) - film-art

Regular price £139.00 Sale

Please select a size and framing option

Preview Matinee Feature Blockbuster Premiere
Unframed Black White Oak



Notes on sizing

All measurements given are for the printed image only. To calculate the overall dimensions of a framed print please add 200mm to both the horizontal and vertical measurements.

Example: A print image that is specified as being 825mm x 351m will sit inside a frame that has the approximate outside dimensions of 1025mm x 551mm.

'Amistad' (1997)

Limited edition giclee printed on photo rag 308 gsm fine art paper

Director: Steven Spielberg

Writers : David Franzoni

Stars : Djimon Hounsou, Matthew McConaughey, Anthony Hopkins

Amistad is the name of a slave ship traveling from Cuba to the U.S. in 1839. It is carrying a cargo of Africans who have been sold into slavery in Cuba, taken on board, and chained in the cargo hold of the ship. As the ship is crossing from Cuba to the U.S., Cinque, who was a tribal leader in Africa, leads a mutiny and takes over the ship. They continue to sail, hoping to find help when they land. Instead, when they reach the United States, they are imprisoned as runaway slaves. They don't speak a word of English, and it seems like they are doomed to die for killing their captors when an abolitionist lawyer decides to take their case, arguing that they were free citizens of another country and not slaves at all. The case finally gets to the Supreme Court, where John Quincy Adams makes an impassioned and eloquent plea for their release.