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A Dry White Season

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A Dry White Season (1989)

September. 20,1989
|
7
|
R
| Drama Mystery
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During the 1976 Soweto uprising, a white school teacher's life and values are threatened when he asks questions about the death of a young black boy who died in police custody.

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Reviews

Taraparain
1989/09/20

Tells a fascinating and unsettling true story, and does so well, without pretending to have all the answers.

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Voxitype
1989/09/21

Good films always raise compelling questions, whether the format is fiction or documentary fact.

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Donald Seymour
1989/09/22

This is one of the best movies I’ve seen in a very long time. You have to go and see this on the big screen.

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Kimball
1989/09/23

Exactly the movie you think it is, but not the movie you want it to be.

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SnoopyStyle
1989/09/24

It's 1976. Ben du Toit (Donald Sutherland) is a liberal South African schoolmaster and a former rugby star. He is shocked by the police beating of his gardener Gordon's son but does nothing. When the kids gather to protest the teaching of Afrikaans, the police reply with violence. Gordon's son goes missing. Ben, in his sheltered life, tries to help and the police tells him that he's dead. Ben again advises Gordon to leave it alone. Gordon continues to investigate and gets arrested. Captain Stolz (Jürgen Prochnow) is the man in charge of torturing Gordon. Gordon's wife brings lawyer Stanley Makhaya (Zakes Mokae). The police claims that Gordon committed suicide. Stanley brings Ben to the Soweto township and shown the truth of his torture. Melanie Bruwer (Susan Sarandon) is a newspaper reporter. Civil rights lawyer Ian McKenzie (Marlon Brando) relents to Ben and takes on the case.Ben is a clueless idiot at the start of the movie and that is the part that I dislike most about the movie. It would be so much better for Ben to be in denial. Sutherland plays it so wide eye and ill-informed. It would be more dramatic and better as character development that he doesn't come off as ignorant at the beginning. The court case in the middle drags on a little too much. It's often hard to switch into court like that. There isn't the shock of revelation since the movie already showed the torture earlier. This is also very heavy handed. This feels like a sermon more than a drama. Having Marlon Brando there pontificating doesn't help. The other problem is that after the court case, the movie goes back to the white folks. Even though it's not the movie intention, the black folks get sidelined. Nevertheless, it's an interesting attempt at bringing South Africa to the big screen.

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Gordon-11
1989/09/25

This film is about a white teacher who stands up against the horrific social injustice in South Africa."A Dry White Season" portrays the widespread, systematic and inhuman injustice under the apartheid system. It tells how Africans get mistreated, brutally tortured and even murdered on their own land. It tells how powerless Africans are against such horrific social injustice. No matter how hard they try, the system is just too powerful to be shaken."A Dry White Season" is a powerful film. Though it is slow in pace, it is so powerful that can only shock every viewer right to the core. It raises awareness of what went on under the apartheid system, and reminds people of the heinous crimes committed under such a system. If only there are more fighters like Ben du Toit, the world would be a better place.

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jotix100
1989/09/26

Apartheid gripped South Africa for many years. One heard the news with total disbelief, as things got worse in that country. Euzhan Palcy has brought Andre Brink's novel to the screen making a statement along the way about what was wrong in South Africa under the brutal repression of those that dared to make a stand.The carnage one sees in the film is hard to take. Especially, since one occurrence is directed to innocent children who are trying to make a stand about education. At the time, the white establishment labeled communist all those that dared oppose the ruling class. It's ironic that after things got to be democratic, those same rebels didn't turn the country into a communist state.The story centers on a white teacher that suddenly awakens to what is happening around him. His involvement comes through his gardener, Gordon, who is a decent man. When the gardener's son is arrested, Gordon turns to Ben for help. That will mark the beginning of Ben's passive attitude toward apartheid. By trying to help, Ben will be a marked man, a traitor to his people, according to even his own family.Donald Sutherland makes an excellent Ben, the former football star and teacher. We watch him as he gets deeply involved in his quest for justice in a land where it was unknown. Zakes Mokae, an immensely talented actor of stage and screen, plays Stanley the man that serves as a link between the struggling faction and Ben. Jurgen Prochnow plays the sadistic Capt. Stolz conveying all the cruelty and arrogance of the man. Janet Suzman is Ben's wife, a woman who doesn't want to see any changes in her cushy life.The surprise of the film is the appearance of Marlon Brando in a small, but pivotal role of Ian McKenzie, a barrister that brings the case to a court of justice, but it's defeated by the system. Mr. Brando made a tremendous contribution to the film.Ms. Palcy's film is a reminder of the injustice perpetuated in South Africa under the apartheid rule.

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ThomsonGA
1989/09/27

"Trevor Moses'" review is most unfair and disingenuous. That review is clearly based on his political views and not on the film's merit, as his opening line plainly indicates: "Typically anti-apartheid sewer seepage" -- those are his exact words.Note that Mr. Moses hails from South Africa. Perhaps he is part of that minority that still resents the end of apartheid? His review would support such a notion.I saw the film many years ago, and it was at least decent, to best of my recollection. Director Palcy has done other quality work, e.g., "Sugar Cane Alley."

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