” The city can be lonely too. Sometimes people who are never alone are the loneliest. “
Webster University presents “The Other St. Nick”, a six-film Nicholas Ray Film Festival that runs December 27th-January 5th at the University’s Moore Auditorium(470 E Lockwood Ave). The films screen Friday, Saturdays, and Sundays at 7:00pm the weekends of Dec 27-29th and Jan 3-5th. The series continues tonight, December 29th at 7pm with On Dangerous Ground (1951)
A film noir more often compared to the work of Carl Theodor Dreyer than its American contemporaries, On Dangerous Ground concerns the hot-headed detective Jim Wilson (Robert Ryan), who partners up with Walter Brent (Ward Bond), the father of a murdered young girl, in the solving of the crime. Along the way they encounter a blind woman, Mary Malden (Ida Lupino), who may offer a key to the case. Featuring a memorable score from master Bernard Herrmann.
Webster University presents “The Other St. Nick”, a six-film Nicholas Ray Film Festival that runs December 27th-January 5th at the University’s Moore Auditorium(470 E Lockwood Ave). The films screen Friday, Saturdays, and Sundays at 7:00pm the weekends of Dec 27-29th and Jan 3-5th. The series continues tonight, December 29th at 7pm with On Dangerous Ground (1951)
A film noir more often compared to the work of Carl Theodor Dreyer than its American contemporaries, On Dangerous Ground concerns the hot-headed detective Jim Wilson (Robert Ryan), who partners up with Walter Brent (Ward Bond), the father of a murdered young girl, in the solving of the crime. Along the way they encounter a blind woman, Mary Malden (Ida Lupino), who may offer a key to the case. Featuring a memorable score from master Bernard Herrmann.
- 12/29/2019
- by Tom Stockman
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
” This boy… and this girl… were never properly introduced to the world we live in… To tell their story… They Live by Night. “
Webster University presents “The Other St. Nick”, a six-film Nicholas Ray Film Festival that runs December 27th-January 5th at the University’s Moore Auditorium(470 E Lockwood Ave). The films screen Friday, Saturdays, and Sundays at 7:00pmthe weekends of Dec 27-29th and Jan 3-5th.The series kicks off tonight, December 27th at 7pm with They Live By Night – 1948
After seven years in prison, 23-year-old Bowie (Farley Granger) escapes alongside some bank robbers. Once out, he runs into new love Keechie (Cathy O’Donnell), and makes it a priority to prove his innocence, or at least escape to the mountains with Keechie in tow. With this, his film debut, Nicholas Ray already exhibits future preoccupations with young underdogs and offers a fine contribution to the film noir canon.
Webster University presents “The Other St. Nick”, a six-film Nicholas Ray Film Festival that runs December 27th-January 5th at the University’s Moore Auditorium(470 E Lockwood Ave). The films screen Friday, Saturdays, and Sundays at 7:00pmthe weekends of Dec 27-29th and Jan 3-5th.The series kicks off tonight, December 27th at 7pm with They Live By Night – 1948
After seven years in prison, 23-year-old Bowie (Farley Granger) escapes alongside some bank robbers. Once out, he runs into new love Keechie (Cathy O’Donnell), and makes it a priority to prove his innocence, or at least escape to the mountains with Keechie in tow. With this, his film debut, Nicholas Ray already exhibits future preoccupations with young underdogs and offers a fine contribution to the film noir canon.
- 12/27/2019
- by Tom Stockman
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
” I’ve got the bullets! “
Webster University has announced “The Other St. Nick”, a six-film Nicholas Ray Film Festival that runs December 27th-January 5th at the University’s Moore Auditorium(470 E Lockwood Ave). The films screen Friday, Saturdays, and Sundays at 7:00pm the weekends of Dec 27-29th and Jan 3-5th.
Jean-Luc Godard once famously wrote that “Cinema is Nicholas Ray.” Champion of the underdog, one of the earliest masters of Cinemascope, forward thinking in depictions of the aligned and marginalized, Mr. Ray’s contributions to film continue to resonate with modern filmmakers and audiences. Sure, you can spend the holiday season with an old man in a red suit, but Nicholas Ray is the one giving the gifts that keep on giving.
Here’s the lineup:
They Live By Night (1948) Friday, December 27 at 7:00pm
After seven years in prison, 23-year-old Bowie (Farley Granger) escapes alongside some bank robbers.
Webster University has announced “The Other St. Nick”, a six-film Nicholas Ray Film Festival that runs December 27th-January 5th at the University’s Moore Auditorium(470 E Lockwood Ave). The films screen Friday, Saturdays, and Sundays at 7:00pm the weekends of Dec 27-29th and Jan 3-5th.
Jean-Luc Godard once famously wrote that “Cinema is Nicholas Ray.” Champion of the underdog, one of the earliest masters of Cinemascope, forward thinking in depictions of the aligned and marginalized, Mr. Ray’s contributions to film continue to resonate with modern filmmakers and audiences. Sure, you can spend the holiday season with an old man in a red suit, but Nicholas Ray is the one giving the gifts that keep on giving.
Here’s the lineup:
They Live By Night (1948) Friday, December 27 at 7:00pm
After seven years in prison, 23-year-old Bowie (Farley Granger) escapes alongside some bank robbers.
- 11/25/2019
- by Tom Stockman
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
Billy Drago, who often played harming but chilling gangster roles and appeared in Brian De Palma’s “The Untouchables” and Clint Eastwood’s “Pale Rider,” died Monday in Los Angeles of complications from a stroke. He was 73.
The character actor played Al Capone’s henchman Frank Nitti in 1987’s “The Untouchables.”
On TV series “Charmed,” he put his reptilian stare to good use as the demon Barbas in several episodes over five seasons.
Born William Eugene Burrows in Hugoton, Kan., his actor-director father was said to be of Native American origin. His mother’s family was of Romany extraction; he took their name Drago as his stage name. Starting out as a stuntman, he moved to New York and beginning his acting career.
Drago started acting in the late 1970s, appearing in films including “Cutter’s Way,” “No Other Love” and “Windwalker.” On television, he had guest roles in “Hill Street Blues,...
The character actor played Al Capone’s henchman Frank Nitti in 1987’s “The Untouchables.”
On TV series “Charmed,” he put his reptilian stare to good use as the demon Barbas in several episodes over five seasons.
Born William Eugene Burrows in Hugoton, Kan., his actor-director father was said to be of Native American origin. His mother’s family was of Romany extraction; he took their name Drago as his stage name. Starting out as a stuntman, he moved to New York and beginning his acting career.
Drago started acting in the late 1970s, appearing in films including “Cutter’s Way,” “No Other Love” and “Windwalker.” On television, he had guest roles in “Hill Street Blues,...
- 6/26/2019
- by Pat Saperstein
- Variety Film + TV
Sierra/Affinity is set to produce and finance the feature film Dangerous Ground. Janus Metz will direct a script by Kario Salem (The Score, Chasing Mavericks), which is based on the true story of war veteran Johnnie Porche. Dangerous Ground follows a decorated war hero who returns home to join the family business as a cop, only to find himself in a different war. This time, he's up against a dangerous drug cartel that is threatening those he loves most. Gary Foster, Russ…...
- 9/6/2017
- Deadline
All this week, we’re celebrating the losers — those talented filmmakers whom Oscar has foolishly overlooked. Landon Palmer interviews two film scholars responsible for a new book on the life and work of director Nicholas Ray, perhaps the most glorified loser in Hollywood history. Nicholas Ray’s films were about outsiders, rebels and pariahs – individuals that either couldn’t or wouldn’t exist according to the status quo. They didn’t obey the rules, cow to authority or play nice. It should come as no surprise, then, that Ray himself was something of an outsider, occupying a singular in-between space within movie culture that was not-quite Hollywood yet not-quite indie or arthouse. Ray began his career bending the rules of genre within the studio system and ended it within a unique matrix of experimental filmmaking, unrealized projects, film school teaching jobs, and the occasional supporting role in a Wim Wenders film. The...
- 2/18/2015
- by Landon Palmer
- FilmSchoolRejects.com
Winnie Mandela
Written by Darrell Roodt and Andre Pieterse
Directed by Darrell Roodt
Canada/South Africa, 2011
Darrell Roodt’s film Winnie Mandela is an oddity. It’s almost trying to be two movies squeezed into the running time of one: first, a typical biography of the “Mother of the Nation” of South Africa; later, a dark and ambiguous look at some of the horrible things that Winnie Mandela was accused of doing while her husband Nelson served a 27-year prison sentence. Both movies have good intentions but both are also heavily flawed, with awkward tonal shifts and misuse of fine actors. There will be better movies this fall, and worse ones, but no movie this season will be quite so strange.
Roodt (a South African director responsible for the well-received Sarafina! and the vile Dangerous Ground) recruited Academy-recognized talent for this joint Canadian/South African production: Oscar winner Jennifer Hudson...
Written by Darrell Roodt and Andre Pieterse
Directed by Darrell Roodt
Canada/South Africa, 2011
Darrell Roodt’s film Winnie Mandela is an oddity. It’s almost trying to be two movies squeezed into the running time of one: first, a typical biography of the “Mother of the Nation” of South Africa; later, a dark and ambiguous look at some of the horrible things that Winnie Mandela was accused of doing while her husband Nelson served a 27-year prison sentence. Both movies have good intentions but both are also heavily flawed, with awkward tonal shifts and misuse of fine actors. There will be better movies this fall, and worse ones, but no movie this season will be quite so strange.
Roodt (a South African director responsible for the well-received Sarafina! and the vile Dangerous Ground) recruited Academy-recognized talent for this joint Canadian/South African production: Oscar winner Jennifer Hudson...
- 9/7/2013
- by Mark Young
- SoundOnSight
It’s Monday, so we all know what that means! Yes, it’s time for another rundown of DVDs and Blu-ray’s hitting stores online and offline this week. It’s a very light week this week, so let us breakdown the new releases and highlight what you should – and shouldn’t – be buying from today, February 18th 2013.
Pick Of The Week
White Collar: The Complete Second Season (DVD)
Compelling characters and intricate plot twists make this riveting crime drama one of television’s slickest, sexiest shows. Matt Bomer returns as sophisticated conman Neal Caffrey, who teams up with FBI agent Peter Burke (Tim DeKay) to investigate an intriguing array of crimes ranging from extortion to murder. Now, reeling from the death of his girlfriend, Neal struggles to unlock the secret behind a mysterious music box and find Kate’s killer, even as his partnership with Peter begins to crumble.
Pick Of The Week
White Collar: The Complete Second Season (DVD)
Compelling characters and intricate plot twists make this riveting crime drama one of television’s slickest, sexiest shows. Matt Bomer returns as sophisticated conman Neal Caffrey, who teams up with FBI agent Peter Burke (Tim DeKay) to investigate an intriguing array of crimes ranging from extortion to murder. Now, reeling from the death of his girlfriend, Neal struggles to unlock the secret behind a mysterious music box and find Kate’s killer, even as his partnership with Peter begins to crumble.
- 2/18/2013
- by Phil
- Nerdly
After denying their split for months, Charlie and Brooke have officially parted ways, reports RadarOnline
Another one bites the dust! Despite their reps’ denial, Charlie Sheen and Brooke Mueller have ended their tumultuous two-year marriage, reports RadarOnline.
The couple allegedly held off signing the 41-page divorce documents until Charlie, 44, re-negotiated his Two and a Half Men deal and settled his criminal case in Colorado from his domestic dispute with Brooke over Christmas weekend.
Now that the dust has settled, the couple has officially split and settled the terms of their divorce. According to TMZ, the couple will get joint custody of their one-year-old twins, Max and Bob – and Charlie must pay 33-year-old Brooke $55,000 a month in child support, in addition to other fees.
A friend of Brooke’s told RadarOnline she was hoping for more in the deal, but she’s content. “It’s not everything she wanted. It’s not even close.
Another one bites the dust! Despite their reps’ denial, Charlie Sheen and Brooke Mueller have ended their tumultuous two-year marriage, reports RadarOnline.
The couple allegedly held off signing the 41-page divorce documents until Charlie, 44, re-negotiated his Two and a Half Men deal and settled his criminal case in Colorado from his domestic dispute with Brooke over Christmas weekend.
Now that the dust has settled, the couple has officially split and settled the terms of their divorce. According to TMZ, the couple will get joint custody of their one-year-old twins, Max and Bob – and Charlie must pay 33-year-old Brooke $55,000 a month in child support, in addition to other fees.
A friend of Brooke’s told RadarOnline she was hoping for more in the deal, but she’s content. “It’s not everything she wanted. It’s not even close.
- 6/15/2010
- by Kirstin Benson
- HollywoodLife
Getty Images
You could be in big trouble this time, Brooke and Charlie. It’s more likely than ever that a judge could deem you unfit parents after hearing of your multiple marital sexual partners.
It’s gotten much worse for Charlie Sheen and Brooke Mueller: According to a new report on RadarOnline.com, they have allegedly engaged in at least ten different sexual threesomes during the course of their less-than-two-year marriage. If this is in fact true, this could be a disaster if they have to battle for custody of their 10-month-old twins in divorce court, a prominent defense lawyer tells HollywoodLife.com.
“When you combine substance abuse problems, domestic violence and a pattern of multiple affairs, the judge will begin to get the impression that these are two people who are out of control,” Los Angeles-based attorney Steve Cron explains.
One woman in particular allegedly has been...
You could be in big trouble this time, Brooke and Charlie. It’s more likely than ever that a judge could deem you unfit parents after hearing of your multiple marital sexual partners.
It’s gotten much worse for Charlie Sheen and Brooke Mueller: According to a new report on RadarOnline.com, they have allegedly engaged in at least ten different sexual threesomes during the course of their less-than-two-year marriage. If this is in fact true, this could be a disaster if they have to battle for custody of their 10-month-old twins in divorce court, a prominent defense lawyer tells HollywoodLife.com.
“When you combine substance abuse problems, domestic violence and a pattern of multiple affairs, the judge will begin to get the impression that these are two people who are out of control,” Los Angeles-based attorney Steve Cron explains.
One woman in particular allegedly has been...
- 3/3/2010
- by admin
- HollywoodLife
Now that Charlie Sheen and his wife Brooke Mueller have both checked into rehab facilities, how will their 10-month-old twin boys be affected?
Charlie Sheen has followed his wife Brooke Mueller’s lead and checked into rehab Feb. 22, leaving their 10-month-old twins, Max and Bob, without parental guidance. Fortunately, a family psychologist says the boys are too young to remember this time and will be better off in the long run when their parents are sober.
“I think separation between parents and children can always be a concern,” Beverly Hills-based child psychologist Dr. Haleh Stahl told HollywoodLife.com. “But living with parents who are sober, attentive, caring and able to take care of the children stands out as more important. If [Charlie, 44, and Brooke, 32,] get what they are supposed to out of rehab, that’s going to be the case.”
Although Dr. Stahl anticipates a negative reception following Charlie and Brooke’s rehab...
Charlie Sheen has followed his wife Brooke Mueller’s lead and checked into rehab Feb. 22, leaving their 10-month-old twins, Max and Bob, without parental guidance. Fortunately, a family psychologist says the boys are too young to remember this time and will be better off in the long run when their parents are sober.
“I think separation between parents and children can always be a concern,” Beverly Hills-based child psychologist Dr. Haleh Stahl told HollywoodLife.com. “But living with parents who are sober, attentive, caring and able to take care of the children stands out as more important. If [Charlie, 44, and Brooke, 32,] get what they are supposed to out of rehab, that’s going to be the case.”
Although Dr. Stahl anticipates a negative reception following Charlie and Brooke’s rehab...
- 2/23/2010
- by Kirstin Benson
- HollywoodLife
A previous employee at Brooke’s Malibu rehab facility, The Canyon, gives HollywoodLife.com an exclusive look inside Brooke’s high-end road to recovery
Brooke Mueller allegedly checked into The Canyon rehab facility Feb. 9 (her second attempt at drying out in a month’s time) the day after her husband, Charlie Sheen, was arraigned in Aspen, Colo. for felony and misdemeanor charges. Now, a former employee of the substance abuse center in Malibu is giving HollywoodLife.com an exclusive look into Brooke’s $50,000 a month treatment.
The Canyon, which overlooks the ocean on 240 acres in the hills of Malibu, is all about providing luxurious accommodations for addicts who are used to upscale lifestyles; facilities at the swanky treatment center even include an in-house chef and a “peace park.”
One of only six to eight patients at any given time, Brooke, 32, will most likely spend her first two weeks detoxing, says...
Brooke Mueller allegedly checked into The Canyon rehab facility Feb. 9 (her second attempt at drying out in a month’s time) the day after her husband, Charlie Sheen, was arraigned in Aspen, Colo. for felony and misdemeanor charges. Now, a former employee of the substance abuse center in Malibu is giving HollywoodLife.com an exclusive look into Brooke’s $50,000 a month treatment.
The Canyon, which overlooks the ocean on 240 acres in the hills of Malibu, is all about providing luxurious accommodations for addicts who are used to upscale lifestyles; facilities at the swanky treatment center even include an in-house chef and a “peace park.”
One of only six to eight patients at any given time, Brooke, 32, will most likely spend her first two weeks detoxing, says...
- 2/17/2010
- by Kirstin Benson
- HollywoodLife
Charlie Sheen’s wife — and mother of two twins — is reportedly back in rehab for substance abuse in Malibu, according to TMZ.
Brooke Mueller has entered in a rehab clinic in Malibu, according to reports, just weeks after entering and leaving another center in North Carolina.
The reason is substance abuse, reports TMZ, which adds that Brooke checked in the day after Charlie was arraigned in Aspen, Colo. on felony and misdemeanor assault charges.
“Brooke has been in denial about her problem for a long time,” one source close to her told RadarOnline.com.
Get More on Brooke Mueller:
Brooke Mueller ‘Treading on Dangerous Ground’ By Leaving Rehab Facility Early, Family Lawyer Tells HollywoodLife Brooke Mueller Misses Her Twins So Much That She’s Leaving Rehab Early Exclusive! Charlie Sheen and Brooke Mueller Will Keep Their Twins as Long as They Cooperate With the La Department of Children and...
Brooke Mueller has entered in a rehab clinic in Malibu, according to reports, just weeks after entering and leaving another center in North Carolina.
The reason is substance abuse, reports TMZ, which adds that Brooke checked in the day after Charlie was arraigned in Aspen, Colo. on felony and misdemeanor assault charges.
“Brooke has been in denial about her problem for a long time,” one source close to her told RadarOnline.com.
Get More on Brooke Mueller:
Brooke Mueller ‘Treading on Dangerous Ground’ By Leaving Rehab Facility Early, Family Lawyer Tells HollywoodLife Brooke Mueller Misses Her Twins So Much That She’s Leaving Rehab Early Exclusive! Charlie Sheen and Brooke Mueller Will Keep Their Twins as Long as They Cooperate With the La Department of Children and...
- 2/16/2010
- by willlee
- HollywoodLife
Screened at the Toronto International Film Festival
The devastation of AIDS on South Africa could not be captured more intimately and with more effect than Darrell James Roodt's new drama Yesterday.
The socially conscious director of such South African movies as Cry, The Beloved country and Dangerous Ground has now turned his attention to the HIV crisis in his motherland, and has conceived a moving, inspirational tale designed to spread the word.
Without a doubt, it's a message movie presented amidst majestic breath-taking landscape. But because he keeps the narrative low-key @ as well as investing the emotions in a very likeable lead character @ Yesterday maintains a political punch and reins in the tear-jerking schmaltz. It doesn't hurt that this is a wondrous picture visually making great use of the incredible expansive landscape to distil the personal intimate struggle of people facing obstacles beyond their control.
The film begins as a mother and her young daughter are walking across the harsh, dusty terrains of Zululand to try and see the doctor in a neighboring remote town. The trek takes hours and when they arrive, they are too late, the line is too long and the mother is told to come back when the doctor returns next week.
So, mother and daughter head home to their meager but placid village full of contented people and friendly neighbors. The selfless and dedicated woman assumes her bad cough will sooner or later go away. It doesn't. When she finally gets to see a physician she learns the dreaded virus has infected her body. Her husband, the obvious transmitter has been away from home fro months and is working in an underground mine in Johannesburg.
With little money, a shortage of health facilities and even less hope for optimism, the woman named Yesterday, because her father thought "things were better then," wills herself to stay strong so her last wish @ to survive long enough to see her daughter go to her first day of school @ is fulfilled. Meanwhile, the film tone grows darker as the ignorance and prejudices of villagers turn. Sociable neighbors now give them a cold shoulder.
The character of Yesterday is perhaps a little too saintly @ she is portrayed to be so pure of heart, she feels no malice even to the husband who gave her the disease and physically assaulted her when she informed him of the truth @ on the other hand this is the kind of proud black strong woman character that Oprah would approve and endorse if given a chance. "I am not brave, it is just the way things are," Yesterday explains in the film.
Starring in the lead is Leleti Khumalo, whose handsome face conveys a depth of dignity and soul, making her more than a do-good two-dimensional victim. She previously starred in the musical "Sarafina!". Acting with restraint, she makes the most touching scenes even more hearttugging.
In short, this is a simple elegant film. Yesterday is also the fist film to be presented completely in the Zulu language. Tragic and uplifting, Roodt leaves little doubt of where his allegiance lies. But for a cause this good, it's easy to forgive the film's dramatic faults.
YESTERDAY
HBO Films presents
In association with Distant Horizon and The Nelson Mandela Foundation
Credits:
Writer/Director: Darrell James Roodt
Producers: Anant Singh, Helena Spring
Director of photography: Michael Brierley
Production designer: Tiaan van Tonder
Costume designer: Darion Hing
Make-up and hair: Raine Edwards
Sound Designer: Jeremy Saacks
Cast:
Yesterday: Leleti Khumalo
Beauty: Lihle Mvelase
John Khumalo: Kenneth Kambule
Teacher: Harriet Lehabe
Clinic Doctor: Camilla Walker
Village Healer: Nandi Nyembe
In Zulu with English subtitles
No MPAA rating
Running time --- 93 minutes...
The devastation of AIDS on South Africa could not be captured more intimately and with more effect than Darrell James Roodt's new drama Yesterday.
The socially conscious director of such South African movies as Cry, The Beloved country and Dangerous Ground has now turned his attention to the HIV crisis in his motherland, and has conceived a moving, inspirational tale designed to spread the word.
Without a doubt, it's a message movie presented amidst majestic breath-taking landscape. But because he keeps the narrative low-key @ as well as investing the emotions in a very likeable lead character @ Yesterday maintains a political punch and reins in the tear-jerking schmaltz. It doesn't hurt that this is a wondrous picture visually making great use of the incredible expansive landscape to distil the personal intimate struggle of people facing obstacles beyond their control.
The film begins as a mother and her young daughter are walking across the harsh, dusty terrains of Zululand to try and see the doctor in a neighboring remote town. The trek takes hours and when they arrive, they are too late, the line is too long and the mother is told to come back when the doctor returns next week.
So, mother and daughter head home to their meager but placid village full of contented people and friendly neighbors. The selfless and dedicated woman assumes her bad cough will sooner or later go away. It doesn't. When she finally gets to see a physician she learns the dreaded virus has infected her body. Her husband, the obvious transmitter has been away from home fro months and is working in an underground mine in Johannesburg.
With little money, a shortage of health facilities and even less hope for optimism, the woman named Yesterday, because her father thought "things were better then," wills herself to stay strong so her last wish @ to survive long enough to see her daughter go to her first day of school @ is fulfilled. Meanwhile, the film tone grows darker as the ignorance and prejudices of villagers turn. Sociable neighbors now give them a cold shoulder.
The character of Yesterday is perhaps a little too saintly @ she is portrayed to be so pure of heart, she feels no malice even to the husband who gave her the disease and physically assaulted her when she informed him of the truth @ on the other hand this is the kind of proud black strong woman character that Oprah would approve and endorse if given a chance. "I am not brave, it is just the way things are," Yesterday explains in the film.
Starring in the lead is Leleti Khumalo, whose handsome face conveys a depth of dignity and soul, making her more than a do-good two-dimensional victim. She previously starred in the musical "Sarafina!". Acting with restraint, she makes the most touching scenes even more hearttugging.
In short, this is a simple elegant film. Yesterday is also the fist film to be presented completely in the Zulu language. Tragic and uplifting, Roodt leaves little doubt of where his allegiance lies. But for a cause this good, it's easy to forgive the film's dramatic faults.
YESTERDAY
HBO Films presents
In association with Distant Horizon and The Nelson Mandela Foundation
Credits:
Writer/Director: Darrell James Roodt
Producers: Anant Singh, Helena Spring
Director of photography: Michael Brierley
Production designer: Tiaan van Tonder
Costume designer: Darion Hing
Make-up and hair: Raine Edwards
Sound Designer: Jeremy Saacks
Cast:
Yesterday: Leleti Khumalo
Beauty: Lihle Mvelase
John Khumalo: Kenneth Kambule
Teacher: Harriet Lehabe
Clinic Doctor: Camilla Walker
Village Healer: Nandi Nyembe
In Zulu with English subtitles
No MPAA rating
Running time --- 93 minutes...
- 9/17/2004
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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