In 1976, amidst armed
political conflict that is affecting daily life in
Jamaica,
Bob Marley announces that he will perform at
Smile Jamaica Concert, promoting peace amongst the warring factions. While preparing for the concert, Marley, his wife
Rita, and several other members of his band,
Bob Marley and the Wailers, are
shot by assailants. Rita and Marley are hospitalized, but survive and recover from their injuries in time for the concert. After performing, Marley, saddened that his own countrymen would try to kill him and his wife, shows the crowd his bullet wounds and walks off stage. He tells Rita to take their children to
Delaware,
United States, as he and the rest of his band venture to
London to record their next two albums. After struggling to come up with a new album concept, Marley asks Rita to rejoin him and the band in
England. Taking inspiration from the
soundtrack of the film
Exodus and their own situation, he and the band begin recording what would become their
album of the same name, in conjunction with a second album that is released in 1978. The album becomes a hit and helps further popularize
reggae music and the
Rastafari movement around the world. When the recording company schedules a tour in
Europe, Marley also aims for stops throughout
Africa to inspire the people there. That leads to friction with Rita, as she and Marley argue about his responsibilities and about their infidelities, in addition to having given up on promoting peace back in Jamaica. Marley also gets into an altercation with manager Don Taylor over a financial dispute. After a toenail infection, caused by being hit by a football, raises concern from Rita and his record producer
Chris Blackwell, Marley is later diagnosed with a
rare skin cancer. Blackwell confronts Marley about treatment choices, but a firm Marley reluctantly dismisses him. Marley, faced with his own mortality, reconciles with Rita and Taylor and finally decides to return to
Jamaica in 1978, where he is welcomed back by a crowd at the airport. Back home, the gunman who had shot him and the others arrives and begs for forgiveness, to which Marley states he "keeps no vengeance." After Marley debuts
Redemption Song to Rita and the children about reconciliation, she finally deems him ready to perform a peace concert. The film ends as Marley and his band gear up to perform again for the Jamaican crowd with the song "
One Love." A pre-credits montage shows clips of the real Marley and his band during the
One Love Peace Concert, which sees them joined on-stage by the heads of both of Jamaica's political parties, and also reveals that Marley and his band performed in
Zimbabwe to celebrate the nation's independence before he died of his cancer in 1981, at the age of 36. ==Cast==