Showing posts with label movies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label movies. Show all posts

Izaziso

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Hey dolls,

How is it Wednesday already? It might as well be December 27th. I just don't know where the time goes anymore. Sorry for my poor blogging but I'v been busy working. The moon has also been wreaking havoc in my life and there have been a lot of changes to deal with. It really feels like it's almost the end of the year.

On the news front, Two, the shop which has been sharing the space with Mememe Joburg, moved out yesterday.  They moved to a factory in Doornfontein and no longer have a retail front, except they are now going to produce their own clothing to distribute to hundreds of stores nationwide. Good for them. It was a little surreal seeing them pack because it was exactly two years ago this time that we were all moving in.  We will miss them shem but I guess change is good for everyone.

From 1 April, the space will be rented out by photographer Liam Lynch and stylist Zandi Tisani under the name Trade Union.  It will become a living breathing space for various projects, exhibitions and it's going to become Liam's photography studio that will be rented out for shoots but more on that when it's actually happening.  Trade Union will also be collaborating with MeMeMe, our first initiative being Sterring.  The word Sterring is actually derived from ''Starring'' as in X Movie starring X actor. But naturally as blacks, we barstadized the word and for some reason, every black person in this country knows what you mean when you refer to the ''Sterring'' of the film. Our childhood conversations would go something like this:

''Hey have you seen True Lies?"
''No, what's it about? Who is the sterring?''
''It's the new one with Shwaznega''

Typical 80s Sterrings include the likes of Bruce Lee, Steven Segal, Jean-Claude van Damme, Charles Bronson or is it Branson?, Arnold 'Shwaznega' Schwazernegger, Chuck Norris and the sterring to top all Sterrings:



I don't think there's a single person in the world who doesn't picture the face of Henry Cele when they think about Shaka Zulu.  The word has actually remained in our collective cultural consciousness and we thought it is the perfect name to give our series of free outdoor screenings of African films.  Starting this Friday, we are screening Senegalese filmmaker Djibril Diop Mambety's Touki Bouki and I'm happy to report that we are already fully booked!  There's not much to do in the early evening on Fridays in Jozi and this is honestly just for the fun of it, because we can and because we like things.  Our next film is on the 5th of April and if I were you, I would book early by emailing sterringjhb@gmail.com. We are very excited about this initiative. In April, Trade Union and Mememe will be bringing you a very delicious imported initiative - stay tooned!  Hope everybody is having a lekker year so far!

Re the title of today's post: Izaziso is a Xhosa word that means ''announcements''.  Every Sunday at Church when we were kids, we would be so excited when some clergyman would stand at the pulpit and say very slowly in a deep and reassuring voice ''Izaziso'' to announce that week's church news, a weekly event that would indicate the end of that week's sermon; music to our impatient little ears, a message of freedom that released us from those scratchy merengue dresses and bobby socks.  And of course, the knowledge that Sunday lunch came with jelly and custard would have us hop skipping to the car for the long drive back home.

OTELO BURNING

Tuesday, March 27, 2012


Local films are such a treat. I am particularly excited about Otelo Burning because it is distributed by the same clever women (Indigenius Film Distrubution) that brought Viva Riva to South Africa.  Directed by Sarah Bletcher, Otelo Burning is a coming of age story set in Natal in 1989, about a group of Zulu boys that find solace in an unlikely sport for black kids back then - surfing; and it's based on a true story.

I watched the trailer and my goosebumps led me to attempt to download the mixtape/soundtrack, which features the talents of Motif Records' Tumi and Tiago of Tumi and The Volume, Zaki Ibrahim, Reason as well as The Fridge among others.  As it turns out, I can't download it until 2 April.   Damn.  That's ok, I can wait until the film's official release date on 11 May. 

Come Back, Africa

Saturday, January 28, 2012


My friend Celiwe sent this to me today. It's the trailer for the restored version of Lionel Rogosin's Come Back, Africa - a feature film released to the world in 1959/1960 about the life of black people during Apartheid in the 1950's.  They've done a brilliant job on the restoration.  I really can't wait to see this. The local re-release was meant to coincide with the ANC Centenary celebrations this month.  If anybody knows when and where this will be screened in SA, please shed some light.  

if i get to do one thing this year

Monday, January 16, 2012


Wes Anderson is but a saint sent from the holy hole of film making. I will watch anything with Frances Mcdormand and Ed Norton. Bill Murray is a bonus and of course, if a plot involves child protagonists and costumes, i'm in there. And we worship Tilda Swinton. I feel another classing in the making. 

Confession. This is what I actually went to look for at the video store.

Monday, September 19, 2011


One of my favourite movies ever!  My best friend Choci and I were obsessed with Romy and Michele's High School Reunion when we were growing up.  Where on earth can I find it in Joburg?  I have looked in so many places and had to withstand judgment from video shop people for daring to ask for this movie. Up yours, these two are legendary. 






Weekend Movies

Yesterday I woke up to a day so beautiful, I wanted to take a snapshot of the view from my window.  But instead of going out to bask in the sun, I chose to curl up and watch some DVD's that I didn't manage to watch the day before, thanks to an over eaters anonymous meeting my friend Marion called when she came to visit with junk food in her trunk.  It was like a slumber party without the slumber.  

Anyway, so the next day I watched Somewhere, which I picked because I love Sofia Coppola and subsequently everything she does (safe for Marie Antoinette).  If you're looking for a story with a beginning, middle and an end, don't watch this movie.  If you're looking for the same voyeurism and nothingness she offered in Lost in Translation, you'll enjoy this.  I thoroughly enjoyed every moment of going through the mundane with Stephen Dorf and Elle Fanning.  Model Angela Lindvall has an incognito cameo in the movie and the end credits reveal that Francis Ford Copolla was an executive producer.  







Blue Valentine

Wednesday, August 10, 2011






Our DVD player was probably the first DVD player they ever made, it must have been the prototype so because of it's age, it no longer plays DVD's, only CD's.  But a friend of mine lent us hers (i.e. it's not going back) for the weekend and we (Nana, Celiwe and I) ended up watching Blue Valentine and You Will Meet A Tall Dark Stranger.  The latter isn't one of Woody Allen's greatest but it's forgivable but I thoroughly enjoyed the interpretation of human relationships in Blue Valentine. I've always liked both Michelle Williams and Ryan Gosling but I have an elevated respect for their work on this film.