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In My Country (2005) Certificate 15

In My Country
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Rated 3.0 stars
Average rating
(58%)
 
Starring: Samuel L. Jackson | Juliette Binoche | Brendan Gleeson
Director: John Boorman
Studio: SONY PICTURES HOME ENTERTAINMENT
Run time: 99 mins
Genres: Drama
Languages: English
Dubbed: German
Hearing-impaired: English
Subtitles: Danish, English, Finnish, German, Hindi, Norwegian, Swedish, Turkish
Released: September 18, 2006

Langston Whitfield is a Washington Post journalist. His editor provocatively sends him to South Africa to cover the Truth and Reconciliation Commission hearings, in which the perpetrators of murder and torture on both sides during the Apartheid era are invited to come forward and confront their victims. Telling the unvarnished truth and expressing contrition may grant them granted amnesty. Can the deep wounds of Apartheid be healed through reconciliation? Langston is deeply skeptical. He tracks down Col. De Jager, the most notorious torturer in the SA Police and tries to penetrate the mind of a monster, an experience that obliges him to confront his own demons. Anna Malan, is an Afrikaans poet who is covering the hearings for radio. As a white South African she is shattered by the accounts of the cruelty and depravity committed by her fellow countrymen. Anna and Langston must both question their sense of identity. Where do they each belong? How responsible are they for what is done in the name of their respective countries? The moving testimony of the victims affects them deeply. In different ways they are both estranged from their families, and their shared experience draws them ever closer to each other. It is a story charting the unfathomable depths of human cruelty and the redeeming power of forgiveness and love.

Screenshots

Premiere

One of the strongest and most consistent elements of this film is the cinematography, and Seamus Deasy's stunning images of the dramatic South African terrain...

Highest rated reviews

7 out of 8 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 1.0 stars
Truly Awful

Hoss from , 26th December, 2006

Dear oh dear! This is as bad as it can possibly get in movies. Awful acting (especially Jackson), truly risible script, thoroughly rotten directing (Boorman hang your head in shame) all adds up to something instantly forgettable. What could have been a powerful, gritty drama about the aftermath of the fall of apartheid is turned into a oversentimental, mawkish pile of drivel. Check out the deleted scenes if you really want to choke on your own rising nausea. Absolutely rubbish! You have been warned.

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3 out of 5 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 5.0 stars
Brilliant!

A Customer from London, 8th December, 2006

Any film with S.L.Jackson is gonna be good anyway. But moving account of problems in Sth.Africa. Doesn't go very deep but still worth watching.

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2 out of 2 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 4.0 stars
Very Interesting....

A Customer from England, 10th November, 2006

Coming from South Africa myself and experiencing the apartheid period and also seeing Mandela come into power while living in South Africa brought back lots of memories watching this film! I think it is a great Film and recommended!

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2 out of 2 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 1.0 stars
Poor

A Customer from Scotland !, 13th October, 2006

Considering the quality of cast and the rich subject matter, it was very surprising to see that this film was poorly acted and did not grab your attention. Avoid!

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Most recent reviews

Rated 0.0 stars
Shame

pottedmeat from , 25th May, 2009

This film does no justice to either Krog's work, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission or indeed the birth pangs of the 'New South Africa'. It could be Englishman Boorman's hamhanded direction, the bad acting of both the 'stars', (Glesson turns in an acceptable performance) or simply that this story is not suited to the formulaic structure forced upon it by Hollywood film, but this movie is sorely disappointing. There is an ocean of conflicted, subtle but tremendously powerful emotions which South African whites must recognize and come to terms with regarding their complicity in Apartheid. (Unfortunately this film once again tells the white story of Apartheid). I do not believe that these film makers were the right people to tell this story, lacking the understanding necessary to avoid reducing complex cultural nuances and rationalisations to little more than stereotypes drawn from Hollywood films about the the Third Reich. Ultimately they avoid the glaringly obvious questions about man's (and they generally were men) ability to treat his fellow man with such hatred while at the same time for there to be such capacity for forgiveness. I look forward to watching Jacob's adaptation of Coetzee's Disgrace.

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Rated 5.0 stars
Could not ask for more from this movie

A Customer from London, 11th May, 2009

My sister and I sat and watched this and loved it from beginning to end. Even rewinding the occasional sentence we missed! The characters and their interaction. There was no aspect of the movie you were allowed to dwell on before you were reminded of another or a new dimension was brought to your attention. Samuel L Jackson says 'it is all about skin!' Juliette Binoche says 'my skin will never forget you. Menzi Ngubs Ngubane (whose beautiful smile lit up the screen) was the gentle African peacemaker good natured yet with a story all his own.... Finally, the very fabric of the story Ubuntu, 'WE ARE ALL CONNECTED, WHAT HURTS ME HURTS YOU'....SENZENINA.

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Rated 4.0 stars
Delicate subject - cleverly handled

A Customer from London, 13th January, 2009

I thought this film was really interesting and the shots panning Cape Point are worth watching the movie alone - some beautiful filming of amazing scenery! Post-apartheid racism in South Africa is a very live & real issue. This film approached the topic in a very delicate manner through examining the relationship between two journalists covering the post-apartheid trials. It is thought-provoking & very human thanks to some great acting from Jackson & la Binoche.

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Rated 4.0 stars
must see

A Customer from Stoke Poges, 13th December, 2008

i think that everyone should watch this to expand their minds about what horror is going on!

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