Buried amidst the haunted corridors of Timothi's (Fana Mokoena) office lies a secret that is at the heart of a disappearance. Timothi's wife Lindiwe (Bubu Mazibuko) carries a secret about a secret, the more she tells us, the less we know. To play the part of the tortured but unobtrusive Lindiwe everything had to be in the eyes of the actress. Bubu Mazibuko is one of the best kept secret's of our industry. Meticulous in her performances, she still makes acting seem deceptively simple. In film, the melody is in the eyes, none better to play that tune than Bubu Mazibuko.
Friday, 11 January 2013
The Secret Is In Her Eyes
Wednesday, 9 January 2013
The Incredible Mak
All Mak does is turn in great performance after
great performance. Hijack Stories, Yizo-Yizo 3, Stay With Me, he brings a quality to the characters he portrays that can only be described as supernatural. During the research and in the creation of Vusi's character, I read Andile Mngxitama's brilliant essay Blacks Are Kwerekweres/Whites Are Tourists. One paragraph always stayed with me in the construction of the character:
"Truth is many squatter camps which host millions of South Africans are nothing but permanent refuge camps. The multitudes that are trapped there are excluded from our democracy. Their lives are punctuated by violence 24/7. The violence of hunger, denigration, hopelessness and perpetual terror waiting for what the state is going to do next, wondering what dust bowl will follow. The poetry of Abahlali baseMjondolo tells the story of legalised, state-sponsored violence against squatters better. their story is indeed the story of the millions of other squatters."
There is a line in the film where Vusi says, speaking about the government: "these people have betrayed us", I have heard that line, delivered by Mak a hundred times and it still gives me goose bumps. Vusi is a controversial character and Mak was able to bring a humanity to him that has touched and affected audiences the world over.
"Truth is many squatter camps which host millions of South Africans are nothing but permanent refuge camps. The multitudes that are trapped there are excluded from our democracy. Their lives are punctuated by violence 24/7. The violence of hunger, denigration, hopelessness and perpetual terror waiting for what the state is going to do next, wondering what dust bowl will follow. The poetry of Abahlali baseMjondolo tells the story of legalised, state-sponsored violence against squatters better. their story is indeed the story of the millions of other squatters."
There is a line in the film where Vusi says, speaking about the government: "these people have betrayed us", I have heard that line, delivered by Mak a hundred times and it still gives me goose bumps. Vusi is a controversial character and Mak was able to bring a humanity to him that has touched and affected audiences the world over.
Sunday, 6 January 2013
Hakeem kae-Kazim and Fana Mokoena: Actor's Actors
Hakeem kae-Kazim (Ade) and Fana Mokoena (Timothi) first went
head to head in Terry George's Hotel Rwanda and shone again in
Rolie Nikiwe’s Inside Story. In Man On Ground, they illuminate the screen. Both were nominated at the African Movie Academy Awards with Fana taking home the Best Supporting Actor Award. They are what I would
call Actor’s Actors - actors that other actors love to watch.
Thursday, 3 January 2013
Who Took That Picture?
That's a question I've been asked whenever anyone sees The Poster. I never had a concept of what the poster would be. We had
toyed around with a few ideas but nothing concrete. Christopher Grant Harvey, our DIT/Data Wrangler, had been collecting frame grabs from the shoot, and he would send them to me at the end of the day to view. Amongst them was this shot of Femi (Fabian Adeoye Lojede) as he walked through the pigeons. Of all the images, it seemed to capture one of the themes of the film: longing to be free. In that moment as the pigeons fly up past him, Femi is free. Months later, Hakeem kae-Kazim and I stood at the back of
the cinema in Washington watching the film. Man On Ground was the opening night film at The Smithsonian African Art House Film Festival, and when the scene came up on screen, he leaned to me
and whispered: “That should be the poster”. He was right. It was one of those images that the Film Gods had blessed us with.
Wednesday, 2 January 2013
My Cameo In Man On Ground
The cameo was supposed to be a sneak peek at characters from
my next film Tell Me Sweet Something. Lindiwe Matshikiza plays the lead, a young
writer called Moratiwa and I play her publisher. The scene never made it to the
final cut of Man On Ground. You'll hear more from Moratiwa soon.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)