Sunday, October 31, 2004

The Story of an African Farm fares well on Opening Weekend

The lighthearted book-to-screen adaptation of Olive Schreiner's, The Story of an African Farm, released countrywide on 8 October to rave reviews and audience applause at the box office.

With a print average of R7 400 per print, The Story of an African Farm outperformed Darrel James Roodt's 'Yesterday', which earned just over R6 700 per print in ticket sales on its opening weekend earlier this year.

Starring Richard E. Grant, Karen van der Laag (Isidingo) and Academy Award nominee, Armin Meuller Stahl, and introducing Kasha Kropinski, Anneke Weidemann and Luke Gallant, The Story of an African Farm brings a classic South-African novel to the big screen as a fun-filled children's adventure in the tradition of films like The Secret Garden and Whale Rider.

The production and release of The Story of an African Farm saw key South African film industry players in Ster-Kinekor Distribution, The Independent Development Corporation, The National Film and Video Foundation, SABC 2, Proudly South African and producer, Bonnie Rodini, combine forces.

The film follows the life and trials of the three children on a farm in the Karoo at the hands of Tant Sannie and her love interest in Bonaparte Blenkins, and revolves around the first half of Schreiner's novel.Says Helen Kuun of Ster-Kinekor Distribution: "A true reflection of African Farm's success would be the fact that it outperformed comparable genre or peer features such as Ella Enchanted, Thunderbirds and Around the World in Eighty Days, on their opening weekends. That gives a more realistic understanding of the success of African Farm. Thunderbirds earned just over R4 300 per print, whereas Ella Enchanted earned R8 700 per print on their opening weekends.

"In Cannes, the CEO of Miramax International told me to make sure the film does well in South Africa so the release here is very important to me," said Bonnie Rodini writer-producer of Story of an African Farm. "Part of our sustain activities includes an outreach program - we are aiming to get corporate companies to buy batches of tickets for underpriviledged children to come and see the film at cinemas."

Videovision begins shoot on Cape Flats feature film

Anant Singh, Chief Executive of Videovision Entertainment has announced the commencement of principle photography on the company's latest production, Dollars And White Pipes.

The film, which is based on the true life story of Bernard Baaitjies who grew up in Hanover Park, marks the first feature film of director, Donovan Marsh who is known for his television productions of Who Wants To Be A Millionaire?, MTN Gladiators and the award-winning short film, Dead End.

Marsh wrote the script in collaboration with Bernard Baaitjies. Dollars And White Pipes stars a host of Cape talent, among whom are Clint Brink (Generations), Joey Yusuf Rasdien, Shaun Arnolds, Genevieve Howard and Nikki Nelson.

Dollars And White Pipes is a rags to riches story which follows Bernard's journey from the drug and gang culture to emotional and moral independence as he overcomes issues of race, education, addiction and racketeering and finally becomes a well respected and law abiding business entrepreneur - which he still is today. Bernard Baaitjies will be involved in the production, as will the Hanover Park community. "Dollars And White Pipes is an original South African story. It deals with important social issues, while at the same time being very entertaining," commented Anant Singh. "Bernard's life story is inspirational, incredibly motivating and very uplifting. He is a positive role model for all South Africans.

We are also pleased to be continuing our relationship with M-Net's local production initiative which began with their association with Yesterday," added Singh. Carl Fischer, Head of M-Net's Local Productions, says the film forms part of an M-Net initiative to boost the local film industry. "We invest in films that are set in a South African context, featuring local actors and production teams, and carry themes which will resonate with South African audiences.

We are extremely proud of all the films we have been involved in and believe that Dollars and White Pipes with its strong message and storyline will be another winner." Videovision Entertainment is a significant stakeholder in the Western Cape Film Industry with its major shareholding in DreamWorld Film City, the R400 million state-of-the-art film studio complex which will be built at Faure which is situated on the R310 just off the N2 in Cape Town. The development includes eight sound stages, production facilities, digital facilities and outdoor back lot areas.

Dollars And White Pipes is a Videovision Entertainment production in association with M-Net. The film is produced by Anant Singh and Helena Spring, executive produced by Sanjeev Singh and Sudhir Pragjee, written by Donovan Marsh and Bernard Baaitjies and directed by Donovan Marsh. Dollars And White Pipes will be shooting in the Western Cape until November and will be released in South Africa in late 2005.

Review: Max and Mona is *&%!

Kwailawai* had the misfortune of seeing Max and Mona at the London Film Festival (LMF). Read a review here.

Gums and noses on a high

'Gums and Noses', a feature film that romps through the tough world of advertising, has won the Best Feature Film award at the local Apollo Film Festival.

"Making the movie was a great experience, and a tremendous amount of work went into producing it in a very short time. This award is shared by all the people who worked tirelessly in front of and behind the camera to translate 'Gums and Noses' from stage to screen — successfully!" producer Robbie Thorpe said.

The fourth annual all South African film festival showcased 12 feature films and 22 documentaries. Graig Freimond, the writer and director of Gums and Noses, said: "It's a fantastic sort of vote of confidence in the film. It's a very small film made on a very small budget. It's competing against films with much bigger budgets so it just means a lot."

The film beat out stiff competition from five other movies, among them Darrel Roodt's 'Yesterday' and Ntshavheni Wa Luruli's 'Wooden Camera'.

Rehad Desai's 'Born into Struggle' won the best documentary award.

The Apollo Film Festival, now in its fourth year, is a community-based initiative aiming at promoting and encouraging local films. The vision behind the Apollo Festival is to provide a platform for films and documentaries from South Africa and other African countries in a drive to boost the local film industry.

This year's adjudicators included Letebele Masemola-Jones, Martin Botha, Darryl Accone and Helen Kuun.

Gums & Noses will be rebroadcast on Saturday 31 October at 11pm and Wednesday 10 November at 2:20am on M-Net as part of the channel's Original Movies initiative.

Source: iafrica.com

Cape Town World Cinema Festival brimming with local content

Eleven South African feature films are amongst the highlights at this year’s Cape Town World Cinema Festival (CTWCF), which runs from 12-20 November 2004. Because of increased activity in the production industry, Sithengi is in a fortunate position to screen a lot more South African titles.

They include:

Drum
Red Dust
In my Country
Forgiveness
Zulu Love Letter
Boy called Twist
Cape of Good Hope
Gums & Noses
Max & Mona
Yesterday
Story of an African farm

Cape of Good Hope

Cape of Good Hope uses a character driven portrayal of eight socially disparate, yet fatefully intertwined people to subtly portray generosity and joy, as well as the underlying racial and cultural prejudices that permeate all aspects of life in the Cape.

Boy called Twist

Boy called Twist is the entrepreneurial filmmaker Tim Greene’s first feature film. The film captures the seedy individuals that survive on the streets of Cape Town as it shadows the timeless Dickens classic Oliver Twist.

The movie traces Twist’s journey from rural Swartland to the city’s underbelly.

“This is a part of Cape Town wholly omitted from glossy postcards and coffee-table books. It’s under freeways, next to railroad yards, spilling out of the City Bowl into the slum sprawl of Woodstock,” Greene said.

The film will debut at the Cape Town World Cinema Festival next month.

“Boy called Twist is just such a lovely story. And Tim Greene’s determination and entrepreneurial skills to get the money for the film were amazing,” said film festival manager, Jacky Lourens.

Greene, who directed SABC1 drama series Tsha Tsha, put the script on the Internet in 2002 and asked for R1000 pledges from the public. He also brandished a cardboard poster on street corners “begging” for funding.

Film Afrika boss David Wicht, who produced soon-to-be released Country of My Skull, starring Samuel L Jackson and Juliette Binoche, reached into his pocket for the movie. “In the absence of traditional funding, we as filmmakers need to resort to guerilla tactics, and this is about as innovative as it gets,” he said. “Tim is an excellent filmmaker, so I have high hopes,” he said.

The movie’s SA cast include Isidingo’s Kim Engelbrecht (Lolly) and Leslie Fong (Slu), Moodphase 5ive lead singer Ernestine Deane, and veteran actress Trix Pienaar, with newcomer 14-year-old Jarrid Geduld starring as Twist.

Although the actors were paid a reduced fee – calling the project “a labour of love” – Geduld has bought a cellphone and a pair of boots, and is saving the rest of his earnings to study.

Greene was also supported by the Arts and Culture Trust, the Spier Arts Trust, the National Film and Video Foundation and winemaker Graham Beck.

Source: AllAfrica.com


Tuesday, October 26, 2004

London film fest bangs the Drum

With a wealth of films on offer at the LFF, we very nearly tore ourselves in several parts trying to get to all of them, but finally settled on staying in one piece and attending South African film Drum, from director Zola Maseko and starring Taye Diggs and Jason Flemyng.

Flemyng himself was in attendance, so we asked him to tell us a little about the film and his involvement in it.

"It’s set at the time of the clearances in South Africa, in Sophiatown, which was a borough of Johannesburg. There was a magazine called Drum, which was like the mouthpiece of the ANC during the 50s and 60s, and was kind of ignored by the government at the time. I play Jim Bailey, the guy who owns the newspaper. It's about what happened to the journalists of that newspaper at that time, and the very first beginnings of Mandela' rise to prominence."

The film shot on location in South Africa, which meant that Flemyng's gangster movie past came in handy. "It's not unlike South London but it's certainly a place that I'll never forget."

Stokvel gets Emmy nomination

Penguin films, is among two African television productions outfits nominated for special prizes during the prestigious 6th International Emmy Awards Gala to be held on November 22 in New York.

South Africa's Stokvel, by Penguin Films, was nominated in the comedy category, and will compete for the award against Germany's Berlin, Berlin. The South African film is set in a community-run savings scheme and revolves around the regular meetings that decide which project will get funding.

The programme received two nominations from the international panel of judges, the highest number ever for a South African film in the awards.

Nation TV Cameraman George Bwana, who captured the heart-wrenching images on film.

The nomination for Stokvel was collected by Ms Jackie Motsepe, of the South African National Film & Video Foundation.

A total of 28 TV programmes were picked in seven categories for the awards.

Friday, October 22, 2004

Call for Proposals for a 10/15 Minute Documentary Film

Out in Africa South African Gay & Lesbian Film Festival is making a call for proposals for 10 to 15 minute documentary films.

The call is open to those who have some filmmaking experience, but who may not have yet had the opportunity to make a film.

An 18 day workshop in Johannesburg, under the direction of British Filmmaker, Rikki Beadle Blair, will run from Saturday 26th February to Monday 14th March 2005. The workshop includes script development, pre-production, the shoot and editing (to final mix). Between four and six people will be selected, on the basis of their proposal, to attend the workshop and make their film. Those who are selected for this incredible opportunity must be available for the duration.

We require a 1 page Synopsis and 2 page Treatment for a Queer film with one of the following themes:

Stories of Liberation
Undocumented South African History
A Slice of South African Life
The deadline for entries is: Tuesday 30th November.
All applicants will be informed of the final selection by Friday 9th January 2005.

The finished films will be screened at the 2005 Out in Africa Film Festival in Johannesburg and Cape Town and will be included in the Video Suitcase, for use at various Satellite Festivals around the country.

Please visit the website www.oia.co.za for the Application Form, fill it in and email it, with the Synopsis and Treatment, to:

Sharon Jackson at sharon@oia.co.za
Out in Africa South Africa Gay & Lesbian Film Festival.

Commonwealth Film Festival 2005 Call For Submissions

Now in its fourth year, the Commonwealth Film Festival will take place April 29th - May 8th 2005 in Manchester, England, as a non-competitive showcase for over 200 features, shorts and documentaries from the 72 nations of the Commonwealth.

SUBMISSIONS DEADLINE: 31st December 2004
NO ENTRY FEE

Thursday, October 21, 2004

Basotho hero finally comes to life on screen

The premiere on South African TV last night of a documentary film on Moshoeshoe, the king who built the Basotho nation, honours the 19th-century hero as SA’s “first Mandela”, says University of the Free State rector and vicechancellor Prof Frederick Fourie.

The documentary has its origins in a conversation between Fourie and South African authorpoet Antjie Krog last April.

“We were discussing history and heroes and she (Krog) said: You have got to honour Moshoeshoe’,” Fourie says.

That comment spurred Fourie to head for the library and fuelled his discussions with historians who told him more about the Basotho king.

“It dawned upon us that he was our first Mandela, our first nation-builder and reconciliator. He is an important symbol, especially now that we must build a new society from a very fractured one,” he says.

Veteran journalist Max du Preez, who has done about six years of research on Moshoeshoe, had given up hope of making a film on the African statesman.

“No one wanted it. The SABC said no, (M-Net’s) KykNet wasn’t interested,” Du Preez says.

But Krog told Fourie of Du Preez’s dream. The professor contacted the journalist and the film was eventually made.

“I wanted to make a film because I recognise how powerful television is and I am a bit obsessed with popularising history,” says Du Preez. “I thought Moshoeshoe was too spectacular to hide in a book and I wanted to jolt South Africans into saying: My God, we forgot this great man in our past’.”

The film, The Renaissance King, tells Moshoeshoe’s remarkable story and links his philosophy of inclusivity and democracy with the aims of President Thabo Mbeki’s African Renaissance.

“He stabilised SA at a time of great upheaval,” says Du Preez. “There was massive famine and tens of thousands of people died during the Mfecane. Only one guy said: I am going to stop this.’ No one can imagine what the effect would have been if the Mfecane went on for another 20 years.”

The king united thousands of people from various tribes and nations, which were scattered during the Mfecane, a time of upheaval characterised by violence and plundering against the Sotho people by invading Nguni clans.

The united people eventually formed the Basotho nation.

Moshoeshoe moved to Thaba Bosiu in modern-day Lesotho, and gained a reputation as a wise leader who was compassionate towards those he defeated.

This, and his successful defence of his people, resulted in many people flocking to Thaba Bosiu for protection.

“He is one of the easiest people in our past that we can all identify with. Anyone can stand up and say: I’m so thankful for this guy’,” Du Preez says.

A cameo appearance by Du Preez’s great-great grandfather, former South African statesman Paul Kruger, in Moshoeshoe’s life simply added to the fascination he has had for the king since his childhood in Free State.

Kruger, who was not yet president of the Transvaal Republic, met Moshoeshoe as a negotiator for the Republic of the Orange Free State. On the second day of negotiations Kruger remonstrated with the Basotho King for arriving late for talks and asked why he came in a loincloth.

“He towered over Kruger, looked him in the eye and said: Because I am Moshoeshoe.’ I think that is so powerful,” Du Preez says.

Fourie said that yesterday’s premiere was “phase one” of his intention to deliver the message of Moshoeshoe’s reconciliatory role to SA and the world.

“It’s part of a general transformation (of the Free State campus and society),” the Free State professor says. “Many people count faces, black and white, but I see it as a more fundamental thing.

“The way people view history shapes the way they view the world. Moshoeshoe is a good icon,” says Fourie, who dreams of erecting a statue of the king on campus, next to the one of former Free State president MP Steyn .

“My biggest goal is to create a shared sense of history,” says Fourie, whose idea of an annual memorial Moshoeshoe lecture on African leadership is also awaiting for formal approval from university officials.

SABC 2 will screen The Renaissance King on November 4.

Source: AllAfrica.com

ET to star in another documentary

Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging leader Eugene Terre’Blanche will be the star of a new documentary.

Terre’Blanche, who makes a living through public speaking, will also release an anthology of his poetry next year.

“I am without a doubt an Afrikaner with only one language. My mother’s language. And that is the beauty of this piece of land where God put us – which screams for us to write about it and handle it with love…’’

Terre’Blanche and his wife Martie, were guests of honour at a function in Pretoria where 11.3% Motion Pictures (Pty) Ltd announced its decision to make a documentary about him and his poetry.

Filming of the documentary started on Saturday on Terre’Blanche’s farm, Witrandjiesfontein, outside Ventersdorp. The documentary will also be filmed in Clarens in the Free State and in the Maluti mountains.

“This is the start of project Eugene Terre’Blanche,’’ said Dr Pieter Neethling, the director of the company.

He said the documentary and poetry would be followed by recordings of Terre’Blanche reciting works by Eugene Marais, CJ Langenhoven and AG Visser.

His anthology will be from works written mostly during his four years in Rooigrond prison.

Terre’Blanche said he was delighted at the opportunity to not only put his poetry on paper but also that it will be shown to the world.

“I try to write for my people. My folk. I try to understand them…”

Source: News24.com

Deputy President calls for moral Movies & TV

The Deputy President Jakob Zuma has called for moral regeneration and for Christians to take the lead in this.

He was speaking at the inaugural Desmond Tutu Peace Lecture instituted by the Western Cape Province Council of Churches.

Zuma's call for opposition to moral degeneration came as his name was frequently mentioned in the Durban High Court trial of his close friend Schabir Shaik, who has pleaded not guilty to charges of corruption involving the arms deal.

On Tuesday, a former secretary of French arms company Thint testified about a coded fax in which the company was allegedly asked to pay a bribe to Zuma.

But during his speech, Zuma appeared relaxed and self-assured, intensely concerned with the subject of his lecture.

He blasted material such as photographs of nudity and violence in the print media and violence and open sex in television programmes and said that South Africans could not expect their children not to act violently or immorally if this sort of material entered their homes every day.

"The excuse people give is that such and such a film has an age restriction. This is more of an invitation for children to try and watch it without their parents knowing," he said.

"People can call me a backward politician and out of touch with today, I don't mind.

SA surf film wins US prize

A romantic comedy about an East Indian girl who becomes a surfer in Durban, has won South African-born writer director Eubulus Timothy the Hartley-Merrill National Screenwriting Prize 2004, for his screenplay for the film.

'Surf and Bhoondi' tells how a young Indian girl has to overcome family pressure and fight racism at the hands of white surfers in order to ride the waves. Set in South Africa, the film deals with issues of change within the one-million-strong Indian community and their relationship with other communities.

It also looks at the bond between father and daughter and how that has also changed for modern Indian families. In public the father is puts on the face of a modern liberal man in the new South Africa, while at home he struggles to maintain his orthodox values.

Timothy, who wrote and directed 'Bridging The Gap', the first ever-live television broadcast from Robben Island, was the founding chairman of the Cape Film Commission and has directed for the stage, television and film.

The Hartley-Merrill Screenwriting Prize is celebrating its 15th year supporting screenwriters from around the world and fostering interaction between international writers. Ted Hartley, head of RKO Pictures and his actress wife, Dina Merrill, founded it. Other founding members include Lord Putham and Robert Redford.

The prize was presented at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in Hollywood.


Monday, October 18, 2004

The return of Ulysses hits Oz

Claudio Monteverdi's mid-17th century opera The Return of Ulysses is one of the oldest still performed. It is also far less appealing to the eyes, ears and hearts of 21st century audiences than most of the subsequent operas that survived to join it in the modern repertoire.

The Melbourne Festival is presenting it in a condensed form which, though not always comprehensible or free of tedium, is admirable for the professionalism with which it respects a pioneering masterpiece and seeks to make it entertaining by today's standards.

The production, devised and directed by Johannesburg artist William Kentridge, is a collaboration by the South African Handspring Puppet Company, run by Adrian Kohler and Basil Jones; the Belgian baroque music group Ricercar Consort, led by the viola da gamba of Philippe Pierlot; and a multinational cast of singers.

The Return of Ulysses tells of the wandering hero's return to ancient Ithaca, and his wife Penelope, and is often emotionally and physically static.

Kentridge has partly transposed the story to modern South Africa, where Ulysses has undergone heart surgery and drifts into a post-operative dream.

This seems to be a gratuitous gloss on Homer's story, and the effort to explain it with back-projected film and cartoons provides visual interest without making much sense. More successful is the use of puppets (manipulated by the singers and assistants) to emphasise the element of mythic timelessness.

Marilyn Manson to appear in Wonderland

Shock rocker Marilyn Manson will appear with Daryl Hannah in a remake of Alice In Wonderland in a particularly bizarre role, reports MTV.com.

The classic renamed Living in Neon Dreams stars Manson as the Queen of Hearts.

The cast includes Canadian actress A.J. Cook as Alice along with Nia Vardalos, Alan Cumming and Jonathan Pryce. Shooting is scheduled to begin this month in Cape Town, South Africa.

I'm not just playing a drag queen, I'm playing a woman, Manson told MTV. There's a big difference, and there's more work to do on that. So I'm studying early Joan Crawford, and I've been kind of watching the lady at home, picking up some characteristics. She can teach me how to put my stockings on straight, though I think I've already mastered that.

Bollywood eyes sleepy SA town

By Kuben Chetty

Former Bollywood actor and now producer Anil Kapoor, an Indian director of both stage and film, and film crews from India and South Africa have been scouring Eshowe for the ideal spot to film a movie called Gandhi, My Father.

The movie is based on Mahatma Gandhi's tempestuous relationship with his son but the film crew's clandestine activities have sparked plenty of interest in the town as well as plenty of hush-hush rumours.

So what is going on in Eshowe?

Is there any truth that major Bollywood stars like Shah Rukh Khan and Amitabh Bachchan are about to do a big budget movie using the sprawling hills of Eshowe in one of their sets?

Have staff at the George Hotel been turning out extravagant eastern meals to cater to the whims of these stars?


Historian Hassim Seedat is the film's historical adviser and laughs at suggestions that the movie being shot in Eshowe is a Bollywood flick or that it contains any big-name stars.

"The movie looks at the often stormy relationship between Gandhi and his son, Harilall.

"The filmmakers have chosen Eshowe as a set because it has authentic territory reminiscent of when Gandhi was in South Africa."

Filmmakers are busy working on sets of the Gandhi settlement in Phoenix and another farm that Gandhi lived on in Johannesburg.

The film's director, Feroz Khan, also scoffed at rumours that his film was a major Bollywood movie.

Saturday, October 09, 2004

SA features at the London Film Festival

Four South African features will show at this years London Film festival.


Lilhe Mvelase as Leletu Khumalo Posted by Hello


Yesterday
Young mother Yesterday (Leleti Khumalo) lives in Rooihoek, a remote village with meagre resources, with her daughter Beauty (Lihle Mvelase), while her husband (Kenneth Khambula) is away working in Johannesburg's mines. Falling ill, she struggles to see a doctor, never guaranteed a consultation after walking the long distance to the medical centre, which is only open one day a week and always oversubscribed. When she finally gets an appointment, she is diagnosed as HIV positive. Devastated, she goes to visit her husband who refuses to accept the situation, and Yesterday is left to fend for herself, desperately hoping she will survive long enough to see Beauty go to school.

Stander
A bravura actioner, Stander tells the story of Andre Stander, a police captain celebrated as an outlaw when he turned notorious bank robber and became an embarrassment to South Africa's Apartheid authorities in the late 70s and early 80s.

Max and Mona
A quirky combination of love, tears, death and comedy, Max and Mona presents South African contemporary life through the droll and eventful journeys of Max Bua, a 19-year-old village bumpkin who has an extraordinary talent of crying at funerals and is held in high esteem by the village community.


A scene from Drum Posted by Hello


Drum
Set in Johannesburg, Drum depicts Sophiatown of the 50s, the breeding ground for resistance, a vibrant place, full of music, love and laughter.

Max and Mona

Meet Max Bua (Mpho Lovingo), 19 years of age, precocious jewel in the crown of the idyllic Zwartruggen's farm community, and the rising mourning star, on account of his extraordinary and magical talent for crying at funerals. Like his legendary grandfather before him, Max can melt a heart of stone and bring tears to the eyes of a killer. Even the dishonourably departed get a fitting farewell when Max "Max and Mona" Bua is in the house. Despite this heaven sent talent, Max has his sights set on becoming a doctor, but in order to achieve this dream, he must journey to the daunting metropolis of Johannesburg and begin his studies at University.


 Posted by Hello

The quaint community who hold him in such high esteem hail Max's departure with emotional fanfare. However, Max is addled with a sacred sacrificial goat that he needs to deliver to a wedding in Yeoville, a sleazy suburb in Johannesburg. The goat, aptly named Mona, has a penchant for creating mayhem in public areas that gets Max into more trouble than he needs.

Max's initial impressions of entering the super-charged city of Johannesburg, is one of awe and fear. Never in his life has he seen so many people charging like bloodhounds through a busy intersection, seemingly on some covert mission. It is in this mad throng of human traffic that Max bumps into Nozipho (Tumie Melani), a sexy siren who finds his naiveté somewhat appealing.

Instead of dropping off the goat as planned, Max walks smack bang into the middle of a dodgy police drug bust. As a result Max misses the cut-off time to pay for his tuition fees at University. Stranded with bleating Mona, Max turns to the only person he knows in town, his disreputable Uncle Norman (Jerry Mofokeng). He arrives at Norman's ramshackle digs in Soweto, only to become embroiled in a gangster face-off with feared township kingpin Razor (Percy Matsemela).

Heroically Max offers Razor his tuition money and consequently saves his Uncle Norman and his two laissez-faire pals Six (Coco Merckel) and Skeels (Seputla Sebogodi). They live to fight another day. Yet this is only the beginning of a thorny series of events, triggered by crooked Uncle Norman and his deadly plan to make a killing at funerals by exploiting his nephew's gift.

Title Max and Mona
Duration 98 min
Production Date 2004
Format HD and 35mm, Dolby Digital

Executive Producers Jeremy Nathan and Joel Phiri
Writer/Director Teddy Mattera
Additional Writing Greg Latter
Producer Tendeka Matatu
Director Of Photography Ivan Leathers
Production Designer Dimitri Repanis
Editor Kuing-Yuan (Henion) Han
Music Composer Phillip Miller
Production Company Ice Media /Ice Films

Key Cast

Max Mpho Lovinga
Uncle Norman Jerry Mofokeng
Nozipho Tumi Melamu
Six Coco Merckel
Skeel Seputla Sebugodi
Razor Percy Matsemela


Monday, October 04, 2004

Story of an African Farm

With lots of rolypoly sheep as extras and, as witnesses, those splayfoot ratites, otherwise known as Boer chickens: ostriches, Olive Schreiner’s Story of an African Farm has been filmed for the second time, writes Stephen Gray

Filming our great novel, The Story of an African Farm, one imagined would not be without hazards. As every reader since it was first published in 1883 knows, it was one of those Mid-Victorian classics caught up in its own coils of conscience, a kind of verbal quagmire out of which there was no getting up and getting on.

For scholars, it has come to be an early attempt to escape the imperial condition into the refreshingly postmodern. But for her publishers in the heart of Empire, at which valiant Olive Schreiner was the first to strike back, it was hardly rebellious: here was Africa, to them so exotic, picturesque, their colourful dreamland.

So that when South African audiences had a sneak preview of their historical marker in world literature on film in May this year, during the European Union Film Festival, it came as a consummate irony that it should be the entry of Schreiner’s natural enemy, the United Kingdom.

But still, over there, they recognise a rattling good story when they read one. Nor, seemingly, do they take umbrage at the book’s caricature of the most truly vile Brit imaginable.

He is a remittance man named Bonaparte Blenkins on the lam, whom Schreiner’s Karoo-dwellers are too naive to identify as your archetypal Cockney predator. On the prowl inland, how can he resist turning off to take gormless Tant’ Sannie, her helpless underage wards, the two daughters of a dead Englishman, and her hopelessly old German foreman, marooned in the milkbushes, for everything they’ve got? In fact, why not take them for all of their farm in Africa?

That is the brutal plot-line of the first part of this big, floppy novel, to which David Lister’s movie version sensibly restricts itself. One deeply isolated working farm, whitewashed for the cameras. A few takes on horseback for the great Armin Mueller-Stahl as a leathery Uncle Otto. Some snappy cart-rides in your basic costumes.

No old Cape capital at the one end, with its ships and Signal Hill, nor the overturned Diamond Fields making millions at the other. Just lots of rolypoly sheep as extras and, as witnesses, those splayfoot ratites, otherwise known as Boer chickens: ostriches. Filmed in shimmering colour, outside Laingsburg on a shoestring, and without any of the awesome veneration such classics sometimes induce. Keeping it free and easy.

Of course, after all his years of having to find work in Britain, this was the vehicle South African star Richard E Grant must have been waiting for. With a bulbous nose to be squeezed for a tot and his rat’s tail hair, he is out now to teach crocodiles to cry. He gives the bold comedy performance of a lifetime.

But Mueller-Stahl is one to give back what he gets. Those who remember fondly how Gordon Vorster, as the gentle Uncle Otto in the television serial of the 1970s, puttered his wonky way to a solemn death, will probably be affronted by this robust version. His “Valdor" (for little Waldo) alone is worth the price of a ticket. A note for purists, though, who will not like this departure from the book. His son here, spindly Waldo (Luke Gallant) with his sheep-shearing machine and all, is a saucy mixed-race lad. This suggests Uncle Otto must really have been up to some interesting no good, which even Schreiner would not have countenanced.

The rest of the cast are unknowns — Karin van der Laag as a chubby Sannie, Anneke Weidemann as a not too squeaky Em, with Kasha Kropinski as future star and feminist Lyndall.

Cope they all do, not only with the Calvinism and the colonialism and all the sheep-crap, but serenely with cameras as well. Up against the two greats of cinema acting, one is enjoyably roused to cheer them on in able support.

The performance I saw was no private showing, but a packed-out public one. I found myself not the only person actually voicing my good riddance to the appalling Grant character — as he exited up the dirt road, pursued by ostriches. And I felt a bit wobbly throughout, recognising the gorgeousness of all our funny, fabulous, vigorous locals. Nor was I the only one at the end actually to applaud a movie.

Besides much critical work on Schreiner in the context of South African literature, Stephen Gray wrote Schreiner: A One-Woman Play (1983)

M&G

A story of our own

With lots of rolypoly sheep as extras and, as witnesses, those splayfoot ratites, otherwise known as Boer chickens: ostriches, Olive Schreiner’s Story of an African Farm has been filmed for the second time, writes Stephen Gray

Filming our great novel, The Story of an African Farm, one imagined would not be without hazards. As every reader since it was first published in 1883 knows, it was one of those Mid-Victorian classics caught up in its own coils of conscience, a kind of verbal quagmire out of which there was no getting up and getting on.

For scholars, it has come to be an early attempt to escape the imperial condition into the refreshingly postmodern. But for her publishers in the heart of Empire, at which valiant Olive Schreiner was the first to strike back, it was hardly rebellious: here was Africa, to them so exotic, picturesque, their colourful dreamland.

So that when South African audiences had a sneak preview of their historical marker in world literature on film in May this year, during the European Union Film Festival, it came as a consummate irony that it should be the entry of Schreiner’s natural enemy, the United Kingdom.

But still, over there, they recognise a rattling good story when they read one. Nor, seemingly, do they take umbrage at the book’s caricature of the most truly vile Brit imaginable.

He is a remittance man named Bonaparte Blenkins on the lam, whom Schreiner’s Karoo-dwellers are too naive to identify as your archetypal Cockney predator. On the prowl inland, how can he resist turning off to take gormless Tant’ Sannie, her helpless underage wards, the two daughters of a dead Englishman, and her hopelessly old German foreman, marooned in the milkbushes, for everything they’ve got? In fact, why not take them for all of their farm in Africa?

That is the brutal plot-line of the first part of this big, floppy novel, to which David Lister’s movie version sensibly restricts itself. One deeply isolated working farm, whitewashed for the cameras. A few takes on horseback for the great Armin Mueller-Stahl as a leathery Uncle Otto. Some snappy cart-rides in your basic costumes.

No old Cape capital at the one end, with its ships and Signal Hill, nor the overturned Diamond Fields making millions at the other. Just lots of rolypoly sheep as extras and, as witnesses, those splayfoot ratites, otherwise known as Boer chickens: ostriches. Filmed in shimmering colour, outside Laingsburg on a shoestring, and without any of the awesome veneration such classics sometimes induce. Keeping it free and easy.

Of course, after all his years of having to find work in Britain, this was the vehicle South African star Richard E Grant must have been waiting for. With a bulbous nose to be squeezed for a tot and his rat’s tail hair, he is out now to teach crocodiles to cry. He gives the bold comedy performance of a lifetime.

But Mueller-Stahl is one to give back what he gets. Those who remember fondly how Gordon Vorster, as the gentle Uncle Otto in the television serial of the 1970s, puttered his wonky way to a solemn death, will probably be affronted by this robust version. His “Valdor" (for little Waldo) alone is worth the price of a ticket. A note for purists, though, who will not like this departure from the book. His son here, spindly Waldo (Luke Gallant) with his sheep-shearing machine and all, is a saucy mixed-race lad. This suggests Uncle Otto must really have been up to some interesting no good, which even Schreiner would not have countenanced.

The rest of the cast are unknowns — Karin van der Laag as a chubby Sannie, Anneke Weidemann as a not too squeaky Em, with Kasha Kropinski as future star and feminist Lyndall.

Cope they all do, not only with the Calvinism and the colonialism and all the sheep-crap, but serenely with cameras as well. Up against the two greats of cinema acting, one is enjoyably roused to cheer them on in able support.

The performance I saw was no private showing, but a packed-out public one. I found myself not the only person actually voicing my good riddance to the appalling Grant character — as he exited up the dirt road, pursued by ostriches. And I felt a bit wobbly throughout, recognising the gorgeousness of all our funny, fabulous, vigorous locals. Nor was I the only one at the end actually to applaud a movie.

Besides much critical work on Schreiner in the context of South African literature, Stephen Gray wrote Schreiner: A One-Woman Play (1983)