Monday, September 8, 2003

Stander

by James McNally on September 8, 2003

in Film Festivals,TIFF

Stander (Canada/UK/South Africa, dir­ector Bronwen Hughes): Andre Stander was a police cap­tain in South Africa. In 1976, during riot duty, he shoots and kills a young black man. Deeply dis­turbed by his place in the apartheid society, he begins rob­bing banks, while still working as a police officer. After more than two dozen rob­beries, he is appre­hended and sen­tenced to 32 years in prison. After two years, he breaks out of prison along with two accom­plices and soon the “Stander Gang” are at it again, rob­bing dozens more banks (as many as five in one day). This unbe­liev­able and yet true story is told with gusto by dir­ector Bronwen Hughes. One of my friends was vaguely sur­prised that a female dir­ector could be so true to the way male friend­ships and camaraderie operate, but Hughes does a great job. Because the story takes place in the ’70s and ’80s, the art dir­ec­tion was cru­cial, too, and it’s pulled off mag­ni­fi­cently, aided by a jazzy and slightly campy soundtrack. The film seemed like a joyous remix of Bonnie and Clyde, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, Catch Me If You Can, and even Starsky and Hutch.

In my opinion, the only thing that would have made it better would have been a little more insight into what Stander really thought of the white society in South Africa, and what his real motives were, if any. Was anarchy all he believed in?

(8/10)

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