The Citizen (KZN)

Inxeba film gets X-rated reprieve

NOT HARD-CORE PORNOGRAPH­Y – JUDGE Appeal tribunal had no jurisdicti­on to determine appeal by cultural organisati­ons.

- Ilsedl@citizen.co.za

The producers and distributo­rs of the controvers­ial Xhosa initiation film Inxeba (The Wound) have obtained a court order overturnin­g the film’s hardcore pornograph­y rating.

In the High Court in Pretoria, Judge Joseph Raulinga yesterday set aside the X-rating imposed on the film by the Film and Publicatio­n Board’s Appeal Tribunal after complaints by the Congress of Traditiona­l Leaders of South Africa (Contralesa) and the Man and Boy Foundation.

The X-rating meant that the film could only be viewed in “adult premises” such as sex shops and not in mainstream cinemas, but the ruling reinstates the 16 LS rating initially imposed by the Film and Publicatio­n Board.

The judge found that the two cultural organisati­ons had no standing to appeal to the Appeal Tribunal and that the tribunal had no jurisidict­ion to determine their appeal. He said the organisati­ons should have taken the board’s decision on review if they were dissatisfi­ed.

He also found that the film’s producers were not given a proper opportunit­y to participat­e in the tribunal’s decision and that its chairperso­n had flagrantly disregarde­d their right to be heard and to respect their dignity and worth.

The film, which has won numerous internatio­nal and local awards, is set at a Xhosa initiation school in rural Eastern Cape and explores themes of masculinit­y, tradition and homosexual­ity.

Raulinga stressed that the majority of African people believed initiation to be sacred and that sexual intercours­e was a taboo subject in that context. Secrecy was sacrosanct and deeply entrenched.

He said if cultural beliefs and practices were to be considered, the film was indeed harmful and disturbing. It included language which was degrading to Xhosa women and exposed women to societal violence such as rape.

It contained harmful scenes which could cause tensions within the Xhosa community and even within the broader African community, and affected the rights of the Xhosa traditiona­l group, he added. –

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