The Citizen (Gauteng)

A local love story

ZULU WEDDING: ROMANTIC COMEDY FINALLY COMES TO CINEMAS TOMORROW

- Kaunda Selisho

First film to have a black female producer and director on a project of this scale.

After a decade-long effort to get the film made and the postponeme­nt of its original February 2018 release date, romantic comedy Zulu

Wedding will finally hit cinemas today.

With Lineo Sekeleoane at the helm, Zulu Wedding is reportedly the first film to have a black female producer and director on a project of this scale.

Described by the production team as unashamedl­y romantic, glamorous and hilarious, all at

the same time, the film pays loving tribute to the richness of African culture while acknowledg­ing the sometimes schizophre­nic reality of many urban South Africans, who live sophistica­ted lives which are still shaped by their family cultures, traditions and expectatio­ns.

Zulu Wedding follows the adventures of a feisty half-Sotho, half-Zulu choreograp­her named Lungile (played by Nondumiso Tembe), who will do anything to avoid falling in love while pursuing her love of dance in New York.

She will do even more to avoid coming back home to South Africa – the country she ran away from to escape her traditiona­l engagement to a king she had never met, due to the actions of her parents, who left her in ancestral debt long before she was even conceived.

Lu ends up meeting her soulmate in the form of Tex (Darrin Dewitt Henson of Stomp The

Yard) and when he decides he wants a life with her, he flies her shifty Uncle Phineas (Jerry Phele) to New York, unbeknowns­t to her. Phineas reminds her of her ancestral debt and demands she return home to fulfil her destiny.

Lu then hatches a plan to confront the king in an effort to convince him to forget about her. That is how she meets the king’s handsome and seductive royal advisor Zulu (played by Pallance Dladla) and enlists him to help her get into the royal compound.

All this is punctuated by the comic stylings of Tex’s wise-cracking best friend Nate (Carl Payne), Lu’s eccentric sister Mabo (Makgano Mamabolo) and her alcoholic best friend Sam (Bubu Mazibuko).

“While we were extremely excited about the February release date, several new ideas started to take shape and we needed time to mobilise the right people to launch these initiative­s. As such, we had no choice but to move the release date,” said Sekeleoane in a statement in 2018.

One of those initiative­s was a continent-wide screening in Africa. The other was an initiative aimed at reviving the movie-going culture that was so popular in the townships during the 1980s.

The film gets off to a cringewort­hy start, surpassed only by an awkward scene with a rapid result HIV home-testing kit. It does, however, pick up and settle into a nice flow once Dladla makes his appearance.

Zulu Wedding redeems itself by putting SA designers such as Thula Sindi, Palse by Paledi Segapo, Maxhosa by Laduma and David Tlale front and centre, in addition to topping the story off with a charming ending and lovely score featuring the perfect mix of local and internatio­nal music.

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 ?? Edited by Thami Kwazi 010 492-5227 city@citizen.co.za ??
Edited by Thami Kwazi 010 492-5227 city@citizen.co.za

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