Movie Reviews for A Dry White Season

A Dry White Season

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Movie Reviews of A Dry White Season

Movie Review: Welcome to South Africa, Benjamin Du Toit.
Summary: 5 Stars

Susan Surandon's cynical remark to Donald Sutherland, indicating that although he's lived all his life in South Africa, he was oblivoius to the brutality surrounding his normal family life. Schoolteacher Meneer Du Toit literally loses everything in his struggle to bring justice to those responsible for the deaths of his gardener and his gardener's son. Feeling guilty after taking his gardener's son's death a little too lightly, he is immediately swept up in the chaotic world of corruption and bloody cover-ups, after seeing the body of his badly beaten and tortured friend of 15 years.

The movie is full of gripping scenes and holds nothing back, with brutal slayings of children, torture scenes, and a disturbing view into a hospital mortuary. The film is primarily rated R for these violent images.

Marlon Brando, although appearing for maybe 15-20 minutes of the film, really takes over in his scenes, as slick barrister, Ian MacKenzie. Even though his courtroom battle is futile, he certainly gets in his licks. He played his character to a tee, and definitely deserved the Oscar nomination, despite the controversy that year, over his limited screen time.

I was much younger when I first rented the film around 1990, and it hits me harder today than it did back then. It's a well acted film, and a powerful one, Donald Sutherland gives and incredible perfomance and a particularly moving scene in the film is when he is in tears on the phone, speaking to his daughter, after finally realizing she has betrayed him. Except for his son, most of his family, friends, and colleagues do not wish to associate with him after the path his as chosen in fighting a losing battle against corruption. A top notch film about a man willing to give up everything, in pursuit of truth and justice over the wrongful death of a friend. This should be on everyone's must see list of important 80's films.

Movie Review: Brilliant.
Summary: 5 Stars

Viewed: 1/08
Rate: 10

1/08: A Dry White Season is everything that Hotel Rwanda is not. Understandably, it's a very sad story but a story of bravery, courage, and justice. Not surprisingly, the acting is real good, but I won't nod that comment to Susan Sarandon. Donald Sutherland once again pulls off another Ordinary People performance and is largely the reason why A Dry White Season can benefit from an actor like him. Even more so, it's the story that takes place which makes A Dry White Season a compelling film to watch. Marlon Brando does enough but nothing that merits anything special. He may have been overacting. I didn't know this before as I looked up information on the director Euzhan Palcy, and it turned out that the director is a black woman. It's a remarkable achievement, indeed. Not only that, she is actually the first black female to direct a major Hollywood picture. Jürgen Prochnow, renowned for his work during Das Boot, gives a great villainous performance through A Dry White Season, and it's quite easy to hate him. It may be the only film I've seen that takes on South Africa's issue of apartheid, which means segregation. Certainly the approach taken by people in A Dry White Season is entirely similar to what the Nazis did with the Jewish in Germany and elsewhere. I could feel the chilling efficacy imposed on black race living in South Africa. All in all, A Dry White Season is a must-watch.

Movie Review: Outstanding, powerful and moving
Summary: 5 Stars

Ben du Toit is a schoolteacher who always has considered himself a man of caring and justice, at least on the individual level. When his gardener's son is brutally beaten up by the police at a demonstration by black school children, he gradually begins to realize his society is built on a pillar of injustice and exploitation.
This incredibly powerful film deals intelligently with the devastatingly brutal tensions surrounding the explosive issues within assumed class tiers and the racially incongruous tempest that was the violent melting pot of southern Africa.
Sutherland's performance is one of his finest, ably backed up by Susan Sarandon.

Movie Review: Brilliant example of living history
Summary: 4 Stars

The world now knows how the bigger part of this story played out. Nelson Mandela was freed, the ANC voted into power, and the Apartheid system dismantled. This made the sacrifices portrayed in this wonderful film all the more poignant. Donald Sutherland gave a great performance as the central hero, and the wonderful Marlon Brando, a whimsical, but impressive representation of the human rights lawyer, jaded by his past jousting with blind justice, but incapable of turning his back on the evils of South African Police state. The South African support cast are also impressive. The film is not a masterpiece, but it holds attention because of the power of the story, and the first class acting. One would have to have ice in their veins or be a dyed in the wool racist not to be moved to tears by the replaying of these dreadful crimes.

Movie Review: Location, Location, Location
Summary: 3 Stars

I watched "A Dry White Season" primarily because Marlon Brando was in it. I admit that checking out his movies has been an up and down journey. However, his relatively brief appearance in "A Dry White Season" is a reminder as to why I persist. He steals the show in a film that is more focussed on shocking us than informing us. I must admit that the hopelessness of the racial and financial divide between White and Black in South Africa seemed to necessarily be overstated. That is until I remembered reading Coetzee's "The Age of Iron" and experiencing the same scenarios. It is all very disturbing although I'm still not sure if this is a depiction of how things were or how things still are.

Other than Brando, much of the rest of the acting is somewhat weak. The essence of the film is the shock and the suspense. I hung on to review the cast and credits and my eyes couldn't believe what I saw. This movie, released in 2005, was shot entirely on location in Zimbabwe. Exactly what message am I to take from that?
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