In a Time of Violence
In a Time of Violence is a fast paced political thriller set during the final tense months of apartheid. One of the most ambitious television dramas ever produced in South Africa, it was written by Mapantsula director Olivers Schmitz, stars some of the country's finest actors and features a vibrant score by top Township bands. The series dramatizes the basic ANC policy of ethnic reconciliation within a multi-racial democratic society. The series' hero, Bongani, a young ANC activist and poet from Soweto, is the sole witness to a brutal train massacre by an Inkatha militant, Duma. When Bongani is recognized he and his girlfriend, Mpho, a member of his ANC youth unit, take refuge in his uncle's flat in Comiston Court, a run-down apartment block in Johannesburg. If Soweto represents the old South Africa of inter-ethnic violence, the residents of Comiston Court suggest a post- apartheid "Rainbow Coalition:" Bongani's uncle, an up-and- coming trader; the Afrikaaner caretaker, adrift in the new society; a Coloured prostitute, who shares his lonelienss; a gay black couple; a disillusioned former Mozambican revolutionary, now a gun-runner. The series deftly interweaves the Soweto and Comiston Court storylines to contrast violent and non-violent paths to South Africa's future. The apartment block unites across racial and class lines in a successful rent strike against a black real estate speculator, an example of the series' deliberate challenging of stereotypes. A renegade white police agent who has been supplying Duma with guns, kidnaps Bongani (revealing police involvement in what came to be called "black on black violence.") But in the changing political climate, it is legal pressure, not Bongani's armed ANC comrades, which leads to his ultimate release. The following quotes,
a cross section of the commentary around In a Time of Violence,
explore important questions about the role of the media both in South
Africa and the U.S. How can television insure balance without sacrificing
diverse points of view? How can it help forge a new multi-cultural society
yet insure minorities the right to dissent from this consensus? |
A SAMPLING OF THE DEBATE... "Now with more
publicity than it could have hoped for, In a Time of Violence,
has a lot to live up to. The good news is it delivers." "Are we politically
mature enough, emotionally stable enough to watch our wounds - which
have only just started healing - being ripped open again?...One of the
best made series in this country, this is a film which should be seen
by all South Africans." "The movie was
very weak and failed dismally as a portrayal of contemporary South African
history...The SABC formerly called sarcastically, 'his (National Party)
master's voice,' seems determined to do its worst to become, 'his (ANC)
master's voice." "Reconstruction
and development have to take place on the cultural front. It is easy
enough to reclaim the past, to celebrate it, but far more taxing to
acknowledge its excesses and tragedies in a process of reconciliation
and catharsis." "I have no doubt
In
a Time
of Violence
is defamatory. The state funded SABC has an obligation to be mindful
of impartiality when it uses taxpayers' money to purchase such work.
It poses a threat to their lives and that of their families." "If the spirit
of transparency and openness is to permeate our new culture of reconciliation,
then all South African audiences should be allowed the freedom to decide
for themselves." "Those associated
with this film will be washed from the face of the earth." "It was very
pro-ANC and anti-Inkatha. But it was a work of fiction. If you argue
that fictional programs have to be balanced, where do you draw the line?" "If the lines
are not clearly defined now, then we are paving the way for political
approval of everything we do and say...We believe that you, the South
African people, expect us to take a stand for media independence from
politics."
Producer: Jeremy
Nathan for Afravision Video
Purchase: $195
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