DREAD BEAT AN’ BLOOD
T. alt.: Dread Beat and Blood. Int.: Linton Kwesi Johnson, Poet an’ the Roots. Prod.: Arts Council of Great Britain, Rebel Movies 16mm. D.: 44’. Col.
Film Notes
Dread Beat an’ Blood is a mid-length documentary by Italian-born film producer and director Franco Rosso. It captures London’s reggae, dub and soundsystem scene in the late 1970s and focuses on the poet, musician and political activist Linton Kwesi Johnson. Shooting largely in Brixton in a Direct Cinema style, Rosso presents a vivid portrait of music and poetry as tools of empowerment and protest. Johnson’s searing performances and sharp social critiques resonate deeply, underscoring reggae’s role beyond entertainment – as a force for change. Dread Beat an’ Blood captures Johnson’s spoken-word performances (he says in the film, “The spoken word has more immediacy. It reaches more people than written poetry could ever do”), his work in the recording studio and his outspoken activism, and remains a testament to the resilience and creativity of a community struggling for recognition and justice. The
film also includes footage of the Notting Hill Carnival riots in 1976, an event that had a profound impact on the British society and its legislation. Director Franco Rosso would continue his work in the reggae, dub and sound system culture of South London, releasing the fictional drama Babylon just a year later, now considered by some critics to be one of the best British films ever made.
Karl Wratschko