A review by nickfourtimes
The Shadow of the Sun by Ryszard Kapuściński

4.0

1) ''One day I summoned my strength and set off on a walk from hut to hut. It was noon. In all the dwellings, on the earthen floors, on mats, on bunks, lay silent, inert people. Their faces were bathed in sweat. The village was like a submarine at the bottom of the ocean: it was there, but it emitted no signals, soundless, motionless.''

2) ''They raise the president. Doe sits propped by a soldier's boots, swaying, his earless head flowing with blood. Johnson simply doesn't know what to do next. Order that his nose be cut off? His hand? Leg? He has clearly run out of good ideas. The whole thing is beginning to bore him. 'Take him away!' he commands the soldiers, who carry him off for further tortures (also filmed). Doe lived for several hours more, and died from loss of blood. When I was in Monrovia, the video showing him being tortured was the hottest ticket in town. However, there were few video cassette players in the city, and, furthermore, there were frequent power outages. To see Doe's torment (the entire film lasted two hours), people had to invite themselves to the homes of their more well-to-do neighbours or go to those bars where the tape was playing nonstop.''