/ 12 May 2000

A slight SA presence at Cannes

Andrew Worsdale

Local films will be represented at this year’s Cannes Film Festival, even if they were produced and directed by foreigners. Leading the pack in the Un Certain Regard section of the festival is The King is Alive, which screens on Friday night.

The film is a co-production by Lars von Trier’s Danish company Zentropa and Cape Town-based Ballistic Pictures, headed by Kobus Botha.

It’s a Dogma production, which means that no props or sets may be used, it’s all got be hand-held and artificial lighting is not acceptable. Shot in Namibia and directed by Dane Krisitan Levering, the story revolves around a group of international tourists stranded in the desert who start rehearsing a production of King Lear in order to combat their fear. Eventually the line between reality and fiction becomes blurred and the tourists take on the “roles” of the characters.

The only other movie with local content showing in the Cannes Competition is Hugh Hudson’s I Dreamed of Africa – starring Kim Basinger – which was shot in Mpumalanga late last year.

But the rest of the South African industry seems to be low on the ground even though a few select films will be on show at the Market.

Anant Singh’s Durban-based Videovision, possibly the country’s most enterprising producer/ distributor, will once again be on the Croissette punting two locally made films: The Long Run, a mixed-race love story about marathon runners starring Armin Mueller-Stahl, and Pure Blood, a surrealistic vampire cop thriller starring Marius Weyers. Both films will have private screenings.

Primedia Pictures will be showcasing John Berry’s adaptation of Athol Fugard’s Boesman and Lena, featuring Angela Bassett and Danny Glover, as well as trying to find co-producers and financing for several projects including the funky road movie Stoned Black Cherries, the black comedy (literally and figuratively) Max in the Crying Business and the contemporary thriller Dog Soldiers.

Another company that will be flogging scripts in the hope of finding lucre is Cape Town’s Big World Pictures with Proteus, a gay drama set on Robben Island in 1700. The script, written by Jack Lewis and controversial Canadian director John Greyson, is set to helm the film. They will also be looking for additional finance for the circus-based picture The Flier, which has already found a partner in Svensk Film Industri and Ways of Dying which has United Kingdom-based Skreba Films as a partner.

As for buyers, Videovision will also be looking to buy productions. At previous festivals they have picked up the South African theatrical and video rights to titles like Run Lola, Run, East is East (which has had 10 prints running countrywide for three months), Kids and Trainspotting.

Although the industry is in the doldrums, the exhibition sector is doing well.

The two major distributor/exhibitors, Ster-Kinekor and Nu Metro, will therefore be buying voraciously. They normally rely heavily on the Hollywood majors to supply their product.

Ster-Kinekor’s increasingly growing art- house division normally does a lot of buying at Cannes too. But Nu Metro, which has a healthy relationship with Warner Bros. and New Line, will probably be less adventurous about buying product from independents.

So, in short, while South Africa’s film industry will be represented at Cannes this year, it will be more from a trade perspective than from the point of view of the industry as a living, thriving art form. But with a lot of chatter, drink and drive, industry players may just open some doors, ensuring a healthier intervention at Cannes next year.