Monday 20 July 2015

Hear Me Move




USA as done it many times, India does it all the time, now its South Africa's turn! thats right, a dance movie. Screened at both the Cannes and London Film Festivals, Hear me Move is a landmark movie that follows the story of a young man named Muzi, played by new actor Nyaniso Dzedze, set in Johannesburg, and directed by Scotness L. Smith, here is a brief outline of the story, “The son of a famous street dancer tries to discover the truth about his father's tragic death 12 years prior. When he joins forces with his father's dance partner, he finds himself embroiled in a bitter rivalry that pushes him to his limit”.


Remarks Smith: “Was I going for the poverty grade in movies such as Tsotsi and
Yesterday? No, I wanted vibrant colour, sweat, glistening skin and we were
actually shooting during the bloom of graffiti in Jo’burg”.

Urban theme from set
 Here's the full synopsis (spoiler alert) and trailer

Born and raised in Johannesburg, South Africa, Muzi is a street dance prodigy struggling to keep a promise he made to his mother to never dance again after his equally gifted father was murdered at a street party twelve years earlier. Little does he know that his father's death was not as everyone believed it to be. When his father's ex-dance partner, Shoes, approaches Muzi to join his dance crew, "Sbujwa Nation", Muzi has to choose between finding out the truth about his father's death or disappointing his mother. What he does not realize is that by joining Shoes's crew, he will make himself mortal enemies with Prince, the former leader of Shoes's crew and head of a new dance crew that's taking the city by storm. As Muzi struggles to adapt to his new crew, Prince garthers support throughout the dance community by upstaging Sbujwa Nation whenever he can and gaining popularity ahead of the big dance competition that everyone is working towards, titled Hear ME Move. Muzi has to dig deep and come up with something that the crowds have never seen before, while at the same time fighting to keep the crew together in the face of backstabbing, jealousy and his budding romance with Khanyi, the stunningly beautiful girl in Sbujwa Nation and Muzis school mate in college. Eventually he finds an old VHS tape that his father left him before he died, and that proves to be the game changer.



Producer Wandile Molebatsi, who also plays the part of Thami Skhulu, says it’s a film maker’s dream come true, The director Scotness L. Smith also had this to say about the landmark movie, 'It may not look like it, but this is a political film. Because it's the first film which lets us talk in a language that is our language. The language of our dance'.

The dance form in the movie is called, Sbujwa, which originated from Pantsula, the South African dance form from the 50s and 60s

Dance scene from Hear Me Move
Hear Me Move features energetic "sbujwa" and "pantsula" dance sequences, choreographed by the award-winning Paul Modjadji, that play out against the backdrop of a gritty urban Johannesburg seldom seen on the silver screen. Smith says, "We opted to focus on sbujwa and pantsula, our home grown urban street dances, because we wanted South Africans to see themselves and be proud of their contemporary culture."


Here is an interview with Bontle Modiselle who plays the female lead role



Sbujwa Nation


Running Time: 1h 2mins
Genre: Dance, Music, Drama
Release Date: 27 Feb  2015                                
Language: English/Zulu with English Subtitles
Age Restriction: 13

                                   
Cast:
             Thembi Seeti, Amanda Du Pont, Boity Thulo, Lorcia Cooper, Khanyi Mbau, Nyaniso Dzedze, Bontle Modiselle, Mbuso Kgarebe

Producer: Wandile Molebatsi 
Director: Scottness L. Smith
Choreographer: Paul Modjadji.
Music: Zethu Mashika

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