Tsotsi Movie Review
Tsotsi Review

"Tsotsi" Overview

Rating: R
2005
Cast and Crew
Director : Gavin HoodProducer : Peter Fudakowski
Screenwiter : Gavin Hood
Starring : Presley Chweneyagae,Kenneth Nkosi,Terry Pheto,Mothusi Magano,Zenzo Ngqobe
Tsotsi marks one of the few times, ever, that I have seen an Academy Award
nominated foreign language film before the March 5th ceremony. The films the
Academy picks are always the year-end greats in those countries which we won’t
see for a solid three months, if then. The fact that Cache, Kings & Queen, and
Cafe Lumiere weren’t even on the short list sent me reeling. However, having
seen Tsotsi, I now understand why those films weren’t picked. As with every
other film category, you can tell instantly why the film would look good in the
Academy’s eyes.
In the slum villages of Johannesburg, Tsotsi (Presley Chweneyagae) roams with
his reptilian eyes piercing through every other inhabitant, silent and
predatory. He takes the subway into the city with his gang to rob and murder
with little thought. In one of the first scenes, Butcher (Zenzo Ngqobe) stabs a
man they are robbing without care. There is a flash of morality in Tsotsi’s
eyes that is quickly covered by cool dispassion, later riled up by Boston (an
effective Mothusi Magano). On a walk in the neighboring suburbs, Tsotsi steals
a car and shoots the owner. It’s not but a few minutes later that he realizes
there is a child in the back seat. Shoving the baby into a shopping bag, Tsotsi
(South African slang for thug) returns home and reluctantly decides to take
care of it. He forces breast milk and motherly love from Miriam (an excellent
Terry Pheto) by gunpoint and eventually grows what Boston calls “decency.” But
not before alienating his old friend Aap (Kenneth Nkosi) and attempting to
return the baby.
Based on Athol Fugard’s novel of the same name, the film doesn’t rush its plot
nor does it fall into cheap sappiness the way so many films of the same plot
structure have. Director Gavin Hood doesn’t explore the brutality of the slums
with the same ferocity as Fernando Meirelles’ landmark City of God, but he gets
to the heart of Tsotsi’s anger and indifference. Hood handles a key scene where
Tsotsi witnesses his father cripple his dog and shun him from his mother with
an expert’s eye and in a crucial scene between Tsotsi and a homeless man, we
see the oh-so-subtle shifts in character from the coldhearted opening.
Chweneyagae has a distinctly lingering face that changes from malice to care
with a snappy acuteness. He carries the film when, near the end, the film
lingers a bit into over-sentimentality.
It’s easy to see why Tsotsi was picked by the academy: familiarity. With every
film category, the Academy, almost by habit, tends to pick films that exist in
known confines but are precise in their craftsmanship in those confines and ,
of course, doesn’t say anything too un-patriotic. Tsotsi is a recognizable
parable but Hood and Chweneyagae make it fresh and new (check the Gilliam-esque
set designs). They take the focus away from the relationship between Tsotsi and
the child and bring it directly to the change the character makes as a reaction
to having to take care of the child. Even in its sentimental moments, the film
is still attempting to find hope in a life of violence, a noble, if not common,
goal. Like all expert adaptations, Hood has looked at his source material and
seen a world beyond the words. He has my admiration, and I finally have an
Oscar pick.
Hot to Tsots.
|
Review by Chris Cabin
|




