Sunday Tribune

Wild West in Eastern Cape

- JOE LEYDON FIVE FINGERS FOR MARSEILLES DIRECTOR: Michael Matthews CAST: Vuyo Dabula, Hamilton Dhlamini, Zethu Dlomo, Kenneth Nkosi, Mduduzi Mabaso, Aubrey Poolo, Lizwi Vilakazi, Warren Masemola, Dean Fourie, Anthony Oseyemi, Brendon Daniels, Jerry Mofoken

THE notion of a contempora­ry melodrama set in post-apartheid South Africa, tricked out with the narrative and visual tropes of spaghetti westerns and revisionis­t American oaters, might seem, at first blush, too film-geek clever by half.

But Five Fingers for Marseilles turns out to be an impressive­ly effective and engrossing crosscultu­ral hybrid that has a great deal more than novelty value going for it.

Director Michael Matthews and scriptwrit­er Sean

Drummond skilfully employ recycled genre elements to enhance the mythic qualities of their slow-burn narrative and reinforce the underlying sense that their archetypic­al characters are fulfilling destinies as inescapabl­e as the fates that might befall major players in a convention­al Wild West saga.

During the lengthy precredits prologue, which unfolds during the later days of the apartheid era, we’re brought to the outskirts of Marseilles, one of several Eastern Cape railroad towns named after European capitals, and introduced to the “Five Fingers” – childhood friends bound by their yearning to rebel against the white oppressors who routinely exploit and brutalise their people.

Initially, they are content to use rocks and slingshots against the cops. But when one of their number is arrested, young Tau (Toka Mtabane) fatally shoots two policemen, then flees the area, leaving his comrades to deal with the after-effects of his crime.

Two decades later, Tau (played as an adult by Vuyo Dabula) is a notorious outlaw who has earned every bit of his bad reputation. Released from prison after serving hard time for robbery, he attempts to turn over a new leaf by renouncing violence and returning home to Marseilles.

Unfortunat­ely, very much like the traditiona­l western gunslinger­s who repeatedly vowed to hang up their pistols and go back to their roots, Tau finds himself unable to follow through on his good intentions.

For a long time, Tau tries to stay out of trouble and keep a low profile, even as he discovers tell-tale signs that, after the end of apartheid and the overthrow of white oppressors, newly empowered black locals – including some of his erstwhile comrades – pose a different sort of threat to the community.

Bongani (Kenneth Nkosi), once a member of Tau’s inner circle, has become mayor with promises of career opportunit­ies and civic improvemen­ts for the citizenry of what now is known as New Marseilles. And he might actually do more good than harm if his plans pan out.

But to maintain power, and his comfortabl­e lifestyle, he’s made deals with two devils: Luyanda (Mduduzi Mabaso), a former Five Finger rebel who grew up to be the town’s brutish police chief; and Sepoko (Hamilton Dhlamini), aka Ghost, a raspy voiced, flamboyant­ly villainous gangster who really doesn’t need the permission he’s been granted by Bongani to take what he wants from the town.

Tau would prefer to steer clear of the bad guys. But a man’s got to do what a man’s got to do, especially when he’s prodded by Lerato (Zethu Dlomo), an old friend and implied romantic interest, and her young son, Sizwe (Lizwi Vilakazi), who’s all too eager to view Tau as a role model.

“You don’t want to be anything like me,” Tau warns the boy. But, of course, he does. And his desire has consequenc­es.

Five Fingers for Marseilles was filmed on location in and around the northern Eastern Cape village of Lady Gray – Shaun Harley Lee’s vigorous and evocative lensing ranks high among the film’s selling points.

The terrain will be familiar to audiences as the sort of harsh frontier setting where Sergio Leone and Sergio Carbucci once had rugged antiheroes clash with gaggles of tough customers.

Bad men bestride this movie-informed landscape with guns on their hips and, in many cases, cowboy hats

(or reasonable copies) on their heads. There are even horses.

Dabula is able to bring humanising shadings of character – guilt, regret, moral outrage – to what is essentiall­y a South African variation of Clint Eastwood’s Man With No Name.

But he also rises to the occasion as a near-superhuman hero when Matthews and Drummond go full spaghetti western, most notably in a scene where Tau somehow survives sadistic torture as resilientl­y as Eastwood’s taciturn bounty hunter (or Franco Nero’s Django) did.

Beyond the western evocations, the film commands attention with a deliberate­ly paced and well-observed story that focuses on the inescapabl­e influence of the past and the unavoidabl­e corruption spawned by ambition. (Meet the new bosses, arguably worse than the old bosses.)

When everything in a movie seems geared to trigger a climax straight out of The Good, the

Bad and the Ugly, it, however, seems easy to be distracted from the meatier issues.

On the other hand, Five Fingers for Marseilles is no less satisfying for being almost too entertaini­ng for its own good. – Variety

 ??  ?? Vuyo Dabula, as Tau, in a scene from ‘Five Fingers for Marseilles’.
Vuyo Dabula, as Tau, in a scene from ‘Five Fingers for Marseilles’.

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