
Soundtrack to a Coup d’Etat
Johan Grimonprez / BE, FR, 2024 / 150 min.
Master essayist Grimonprez unravels the colonial and capitalist motives behind the involvement of Belgium and the US in the murder of Congo’s first prime minister, Patrice Lumumba. Jazz features as both a smokescreen and a means of protest.

After acclaimed essays such as dial H-I-S-T-O-R-Y (1997) and Double Take (2009), Johan Grimonprez now unravels the decolonization of the Congo. He succinctly sets out the international context of the Cold War, the American civil rights movement and the Non-Aligned Movement in the UN, before zooming in on the murder of Congo’s first democratically elected leader, Patrice Lumumba, in 1961 and the direct involvement of the Belgian and US governments, which feared losing their grip on Congolese uranium.
Grimonprez spices this pressure cooker of colonialism, capitalism and racism with jazz. “Jazz ambassador” Louis Armstrong was sent to Congo by the US as a smokescreen for overthrowing Lumumba’s government, while musicians such as Abbey Lincoln and Max Roach crashed the UN Security Council to protest Lumumba’s murder.
Meanwhile Armstrong and other jazz ambassadors face a painful dilemma: How to represent a country where racial segregation is still the law of the land? Music propels this jazzily edited documentary, which won the Special Jury Award at Sundance, into the present in which Congo still suffers from the neo-colonial battle over resources.
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Details
Director
Johan Grimonprez
Production year
2024
Country
BE, FR
Length
150 min.
Language
Dutch, French, Russian, English
Subtitles
ENG
Format
DCP
Part of
IDFA 2024
The International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam (IDFA) is once again bringing an exciting selection of the world's best documentaries to Eye this year, from November 14 until 24.



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