The film is an extended character study of its subject. It follows Amin closely in a series of formal and informal settings, combined with several short interviews in which Amin expounds his unconventional theories of politics, economics, and international relations. Amin is seen supervising the Ugandan
paratrooper school, boating through a wildlife park, playing the
accordion in a jazz band at a formal dinner, and staging a mock assault on a small hill representing the
Golan Heights. He discusses his plans for an attack on Israel, and his letter to
Kurt Waldheim, then Secretary General of the
United Nations sent in response to the 1972
Munich massacre, which commended
Hitler, is touched upon. On TV, it is announced Amin is in possession of a 'manual' which details Israel's plans:
The Protocols of the Elders of Zion. Included in the film are many candid scenes of Amin and his military in action: the paratroopers practise their exercises on a slide similar to those that would be found in a children's playground; a welcoming committee of villagers is forced to flee the dust and backdraft from Amin's helicopter as it lands; a cabinet member picks his nose with the end of a pencil during one of Amin's speeches in a cabinet meeting. In one sequence, Amin upbraids his cabinet ministers for their failure to represent Uganda "correctly" to the world. Even while remonstrating with his foreign minister for his public-relations failures, he is jocular and joking as always — two weeks later, the documentary points out, the foreign minister
Michael Ondoga's body was found floating in the
River Nile. ==Influence and participation of Idi Amin==