Currently on the longlist for the Golden Globe’s Foreign Film category, Moffie has screened at Venice and London film festivals; won at Dublin and Thessaloniki; and was nominated for three British Independent Film Awards: Best Director (Oliver Hermanus), Breakthrough Producer (Jack Sidey) and Best Cinematography (Jamie Ramsey).
The film is set in South Africa, 1981, with the white minority government embroiled in a conflict on the southern Angolan border. Like all white boys over the age of 16, Nicholas Van der Swart (Kai Luke Brummer) must complete two years of compulsory military service to defend the Apartheid regime.
The threat of communism and die swart gevaar is at an all-time high. But that’s not the only danger Nicholas faces.
He must survive the brutality of the army – something that becomes even more difficult when a connection is sparked between him and a fellow recruit.
Moffie has a 100% critics rating from Rotten Tomatoes, with Variety raving, “South African auteur Oliver Hermanus makes his masterpiece with this brutal but radiant story of young gay desire on the Angolan war front… establishing him quite plainly as South Africa’s most vital contemporary filmmaker… Both a shiver-delicate exploration of unspoken desire and a scarringly brilliant anatomy of white South African masculinity. It fair takes your breath away.”
Adapted from an autobiographical 2006 novel by André Carl van der Merwe, Moffie is produced by South African-born Eric Abraham, who has produced two Oscar-winning films: Pawel Pawlikowski’s Ida and Jan Sverak’s Kolya.
Abraham is also the founder and benefactor of The Fugard Theatre in Cape Town.
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