|
|
|
 |
TSOTSI
(R, 1 hour, 34 minutes) |
| |
|
|
Based on South African
playwright Athol Fugard's only novel, TSOTSI is a thrilling,
provocative look at life in the ghettos outside present-day
Johannesburg. Presley Chweneyagae stars as the title
character, a teenager with a killer stare who lives alone in a
ramshackle room in a poor shantytown, where he pulls off petty
crimes with the help of three compatriots -Boston (Mothusi
Magano), Butcher (Zenzo Ngqobe), and Aap (Kenneth Nkosi). But
after they stab a man to death on the subway and Tsotsi (which
means "thug" or "gangster") beats up Boston for trying to find
out about his past, Tsotsi runs off to a wealthy section of
the city, shoots a woman, and steals her car. Only later does
he discover that there is a baby in the back seat--and decides
to keep it for himself. As Tsotsi finally does look back at
his own childhood, he tries to take care of the infant,
carrying it around in a paper bag and forcing a young mother,
Miriam (Terry Pheto), to breastfeed it at gunpoint. At this
point, writer-director Gavin Hood could have opted for trite
sentimentality, but instead he delves deeper into Tsotsi's
psyche, as the young man might have already gone too far to
turn back now. TSOTSI is a pulsating, electrifying film
propelled by Chweneyagae's powerful, mesmerizing performance.
The pounding soundtrack features popular local Kwaito music by
Zola, who also plays crimelord Fela in the film. Winner of the
2006 Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film, TSOTSI "will rank
as one of the best films ever to come out of South Africa," as
Fugard himself said.
|
|