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Red Dust

2004

Action / Drama

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Director

Top cast

Hilary Swank Photo
Hilary Swank as Sarah Barcant
Chiwetel Ejiofor Photo
Chiwetel Ejiofor as Alex Mpondo
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
1016.41 MB
1280*714
English 2.0
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 50 min
P/S ...
2.04 GB
1920*1072
English 5.1
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 50 min
P/S ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by claudio_carvalho7 / 10

Truth and Reconciliation?

The South African lawyer Sarah Barcant (Hilary Swank) travels from New York back to her hometown to represent the member of the Parliament Alex Mpondo (Chiwetel Ejiofor) in the Truth and Reconciliation Commission since torturer police officer Dirk Hendricks (Jamie Bartlett) has made an application for amnesty. The parents of Steve Sizela request Sarah to represent them also since their son that was arrested with Mpondo but has gone missing.

Hendricks uses one break in the trial to threaten Mpondo, promising to destroy his political career telling that he was a traitor. But Mpondo, who is a man traumatized with the torture, anticipates and tells what has happened to Steve Sizela and him in the hands of Hendricks and his superior Piet Müller (Ian Roberts). Will the remains of Steve be found and the truth disclosed?

"Red Dust" is a very well-acted drama about amnesty of torturers, with stunning performance of Chiwetel Ejiofor. The story takes place in South Africa post-Apartheid but could have been in South America, for example, where many torturers have granted their amnesty despite their cruel past during dictatorships. Truth and reconciliation seem to be very difficult to achieve in these situations, when usually torturers grant their freedom and victims are forced to forget what they did to them and live with their traumas and losses. My vote is seven.

Title (Brazil): Not Available

Reviewed by view_and_review7 / 10

Truth and Reconciliation

"Sarafina!"

"Bopha!"

"Cry Freedom"

"A Dry White Season"

"Mandela and de Klerk"

All Apartheid based movies I watched that took place in South Africa during Apartheid. "Red Dust" is the first post-Apartheid movie I've watched, and it was just as difficult to watch as the others. Movies, such as the aforementioned, I can only watch every so often because I need time afterwards to decompress, cool down, and sort out my feelings. There's always a lot of anger, but with that anger are so many other emotions that I can't properly express how I'm feeling after watching a movie such as "Red Dust."

Apparently, after Apartheid was abolished as a system, South Africa created a Truth and Reconciliation Commission by which the white Boers could truthfully confess their crimes and get amnesty (i.e. avoid punishment for their crimes). This was done as a means for the country to move forward pass their sordid history. The amnesty claims could be refuted by witnesses or victims of the claimant's crime.

Dirk Hendricks (Jamie Bartlett) wanted amnesty, so he decided to come forward about the torture of Alex Mpondo (Chiwetel Ejiofor). Alex had no intention of confronting Hendricks or even opposing his claim except that he wanted the whereabouts of his friend Steve Sizela (Loyiso Gxwala) to be made public. Alex and Steve were tortured together, and Steve was never seen again. Whether or not Hendricks was granted amnesty, Alex wanted it to be known what happened to Steve Sizela.

Representing Alex was Sarah Barcant (Hilary Swank),a South African now living in New York. She was a lawyer who only came back at the behest of an old friend named Ben Hoffman (Marius Weyers). She and her mother were victimized by the racist Apartheid system so she fled South Africa years ago and had no intentions of ever returning.

Predictably, the movie was tense and emotional. There's just no way to lightly deal with terrible tragedies such as torture and murder, nor should it be dealt with lightly. I'd never heard about the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, and after watching this movie I'm not sure how I feel about it.

In the end Hendricks implicated a man named Piet Muller (Ian Roberts) as the murderer of Steve Sizela. When Piet was brought to trial for that murder, he pled not guilty while also filing for amnesty, which would allow the crime to go unpunished. The Black South Africans in the galley erupted in anger at the amnesty claim as any victim would.

I'm sharing the events of that scene as a preface for what happened a little later. After this news Sarah paid a visit to her old friend Ben to say goodbye. Ben intimated that Mullar needed amnesty to which Sarah replied, "So he can get off the hook like Hendricks?"

Ben then asked, " How will punishing Hendricks bring Sizela back?"

And that's when I wanted to vomit.

It is such lame pea-brained logic. By that logic, no one should be punished for any crime they commit because how can punishing a criminal restore a life, restore property, or remove the physical or psychological harm done to a person? Tell me. If a person rapes, tortures, or kills, how would punishing him ever erase the rape, erase the torture, or bring the killed person back to life? Of course, it can't, yet we punish wrongdoers anyway out of a sense of justice. In other words, you will not be allowed to harm others and simply say I'm sorry as a means of atonement. You will not be allowed to wrong others and say, "It's water under the bridge." There has to be punishment for the victims to feel any semblance of peace and closure. There has to be punishment to prevent people from taking matters into their own hands. So, the decrepit argument of "it won't bring them back" rings hollow to me.

Does that mean that I'm not for amnesty based upon the Truth and Reconciliation Commission? It's not my cause, it's not my fight, it's not my country. It is a way forward in which the bad actors have to publicly state to the world what they did. If the South Africans want that for their healing process, who am I to judge?

Reviewed by michaelRokeefe6 / 10

Sometimes justice is debatable; but fair?

Sarah Barcant(Hilary Swank)is a beautiful human rights lawyer in New York that returns to her childhood village in South Africa. She is returning to work on the case of Alex Mpondo(Chiwetel Ejoiofor),now a member of South African Parliment, who is bringing charges against policeman Henricks(Jamie Bartlett),who beat and tortured him in 1986, because of his political activism. Alex's best friend was arrested at the same time and suffered the same injustices, but was never seen again. Police Captain Muller(Ian Roberts)has a lot to do with what happened, but wants to be left out of the proceedings. An emotional driven story about South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commisson, that traveled the country in 2000, conducting hearings to grant amnesty for apartheid atrocities. Gripping and provocative.

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