Saturday, September 11, 2004

Drum

by James McNally on September 11, 2004

in Film Festivals,TIFF

Drum (South Africa, dir­ector Zola Maseko): Drum is the story of Henry Nxumalo, a journ­alist for South Africa’s pion­eering Drum magazine. Set in the mid-1950s, the film attempts to recreate the ambi­ence of Sophiatown, an area of shops and nightclubs in central Johannesburg that has been com­pared to Harlem during its Renaissance. Henry is at first con­tent to write sports stories for the magazine, until the gradual encroach­ment of apartheid laws threatens his beloved neigh­bour­hood. Henry’s politi­ciz­a­tion leads to con­front­a­tions with the author­ities and to a pre­dict­able end.

Overall, I don’t feel like I have much to com­plain about. It’s just that, well, I think I expected more punch. I’m a vet­eran of many films and plays dealing with South African his­tory, but most of them (Cry Freedom and the under­ap­pre­ci­ated Barbara Hershey vehicle A World Apart, for instance) deal with the polit­ical awakening of white lib­eral South Africans, and have been dir­ected by white, often for­eign, dir­ectors. Even so, I found them powerful and inspiring. Naturally I expected that a film about a genuine black hero dir­ected by a young black South African dir­ector would be even more powerful and affecting. And this one just wasn’t. Clearly, the casting of American Taye Diggs in the role of Henry has a little bit to do with it. His casting tells me that the dir­ector wanted to make a com­mer­cial film, and with that comes some inev­it­able tradeoffs. The film feels too short and hur­ried to make Henry’s trans­form­a­tion con­vin­cing. His rela­tion­ships with his wife, boss, and col­leagues were surely an integral part of the story, and yet they feel super­fi­cial here. At the Q&A after the film, Diggs even admits that he still feels the part should have gone to a South African actor. The dir­ector countered that “women dig Taye Diggs” and that his pres­ence would “put bums in seats.” Enough said about that.

The music, though, stands out and almost suc­ceeds in elev­ating the film. Granted, it is pretty hard to mess up the music in a South African film, and here there is a fine mix of town­ship jazz and mournful hymns that hints at what life in Sophiatown must have been like.

Overall, the film was com­pet­ently written, dir­ected, shot and acted. But it feels a little bit like a missed oppor­tunity. Apart from the two films I men­tioned above, you really should see the one-woman play The Syringa Tree (by Pamela Gien) if you ever get the chance. That play, per­formed by one woman on a nearly bare stage, has left indelible images in my mind that no film can ever match.

Related Web Site: Drum Photographer Jürgen Schadeberg — check out the film on this page entitled “Have You Seen DRUM Lately?” which sounds like a nice com­panion piece to this film.

7/10(7/10)

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