#Toka Mtabane Vuyo Novokoza Ntsika Tiyo Sibusiso Bottoman Abongile Sithole Qhawe Soroshi
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Five Fingers For Marseilles (2018)
Twenty years ago, the young "Five Fingers" fought against brutal police oppression for the safe-keeping of the rural town of Marseilles. Now, after fleeing in disgrace, freedom-fighter-turned-"outlaw" Tau returns to Marseilles, seeking only a peaceful pastoral life. When he finds the town under new threat, he must reluctantly fight to free it. Will the Five Fingers ride again?
Directed by:Â Â Michael Matthews
Starring:Â Â Vuyo Dabula, Hamilton Dhlamini, Zethu Dlomo, Kenneth Nkosi, Mduduzi Mabaso, Aubrey Poolo, Lizwi Vilakazi, Warren Masemola, Dean Fourie, Anthony Oseyemi, Brendon Daniels, Jerry Mofokeng, Toka Mtabane, Vuyo Novokoza, Ntsika Tiyo, Sibusiso Bottoman, Abongile Sithole, Qhawe Soroshi
Release date:Â Â September 7, 2018
#Five Fingers For Marseilles#Michael Matthews#Vuyo Dabula Hamilton Dhlamini Zethu Dlomo Kenneth Nkosi Mduduzi Mabaso Aubrey Poolo Lizwi Vilakazi#Warren Masemola Dean Fourie Anthony Oseyemi Brendon Daniels Jerry Mofokeng#Toka Mtabane Vuyo Novokoza Ntsika Tiyo Sibusiso Bottoman Abongile Sithole Qhawe Soroshi#Movie#Movie Trailers#Film#Foreign Film
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Five Fingers For Marseilles official trailer out
Vuyo Dabula in Five Fingers for Marseilles
SAâs first western, Five Fingers for Marseilles, opens on 6 April. The official trailer is now revealed.
This year, 2018, is turning out to be an exciting year for South African film. âFive Fingers for Marseillesâ, a western that tells the story of a group of young men (the âFive Fingersâ) who stand up to brutal police oppression in Marseilles, a town in the rugged badlands of the Eastern Cape, opens at cinemas nationwide on 6 April. The film has already lit up the global festival circuit and has earned excellent reviews.
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It tells the story of Tau, who kills two policemen, and is sentenced to 20 years in prison. When he gets out, the embittered âLion of Marseillesâ discovers his comrades are now in prominent positions in the town. But thereâs also a vicious new threat afoot, and so Tau must reform the Five Fingers and take on old allies and new enemies.
TIFF world premiere
The film made its world premiere at the 2017 Toronto International Film Festival and went on to screen at Fantastic Fest, BFI London Film Festival, and the Palm Springs International Film Festival. Since then, it has been receiving rave reviews.
After it screened at Fantastic Fest in Austin, Texas, in late September, a festival review spoke of the world of the film as âa gorgeous, complex world,â calling âFive Fingers for Marseillesâ one of the most striking debuts of recent years and naming it part of âa wave that will completely redefine the international perception of what African cinema can be.â
âFive Fingers for Marseillesâ is the feature directorial debut of Michael Matthews, and the feature screenwriting debut of Sean Drummond. The film is produced by Asger Hussain and Yaron Schwartzman of Game 7 Films and Sean Drummond/Michael Matthews of Be Phat Motel Film Company. Dylan Voogt of Stage 5 Films is co-producer, and Paulo Areal and Dumi Gumbi serve as executive producers.
âIâve long loved the idea of bringing the western into a South African space, but not in a way that risked âgimmickâ or stuck to the routine or the expected,â says Drummond. âIn the world of Five Fingers for Marseilles, I found a story I was burning to tell, a chance to explore a seldom seen part of the country, to capture a vivid way of life, explore little known histories and a chance to write complex, compelling characters, with depth and weight, for the best actors in the country, and a film that would create heroes, anti-heroes and villains that might even become iconic.â
Ntsika Tiyo, Vuyo Novokoza, Sibusiso Bottoman, Toka Mtabane Abongile Sithole and Qhawe Soroshi in FIVE FINGERS FOR MARSEILLES.
All-star cast
Casting began five years before production, with multiple generations of South African talent joining the project, from veteran stars Jerry Mofokeng, Kenneth Nkosi, Hamilton Dhlamini and Mduduzi Mabaso to relative newcomers Lizwi Vilakazi and Warren Masemola. Vuyo Dabula, star of televisionâs âGenerationsâ, steps into a career-defining lead role, carrying the film with flair, opposite Zethu Dlomo, fresh from her starring role in US drama series Black Sails. Dean Fourie, Kenneth Fok, Brendon Daniels, Anthony Oseyemi, Garth Breytenbach, Tseko Monaheng, and Mosili Makuta round out a stellar supporting cast.
A Sesotho cowboy tale
Sibusiso Bottoman in FIVE FINGERS FOR MARSEILLES
Written in English, the film was always intended to play in a local language, and Basotho screenwriter Mamokuena Makhema came on board as a translator and cultural advisor, consulting on language, culture and nuance, and ensuring the dialogue in Sesotho captured the poetry and depth of the original script.
Actors were given the freedom to look at their own lines and translations, too, and the film was written with the intention of allowing silence, allowing for removing dialogue and letting scenes play with emotional beats as per the script, but not necessarily the words themselves.
The film will have its African premiere at Rapid Lion, the upcoming South African International Film Festival, and it will open at cinemas nationwide on 6 April. âFive Fingers for Marseillesâ is distributed in South Africa by Indigenous Film Distribution.
 Five Fingers For Marseilles official trailer out was originally published on Artsvark
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SA feature competes at Toronto Film Festival
SA feature film Five Fingers for Marseilles in competition at Toronto International Film Festival.
Vuyo Dabula in Five Fingers for Marseilles
âFive Fingers for Marseillesâ, a contemporary South African Western set in the rugged badlands of the Eastern Cape, will be in official competition at the 2017 Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF), to be held from 7 to 17 September. This will also be the filmâs world premiere.
TIFF is one of the largest publicly attended film festivals in the world, attracting more than 480 000 people annually. The film will feature as part of TIFFâs Discovery programme line-up which highlights up-and-comers around the world from 35 countries.
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Directed by Michael Matthews and written by Sean Drummond, âFive Fingers for Marseillesâ is a predominantly Sesotho, Western-inspired tale of an outlaw who returns home after years on the run, and finds a chance for redemption.
âA major motion picture of this scale, complexity and intent has never before been made in South Africa,â says producer Asger Hussain. âItâs the most complex, daring and ambitious undertaking that the local film industry has seen in a very long time. We are extremely excited to have a film of this nature in competition at TIFF. Compared to Berlin, Cannes and even Sundance, Toronto is the one festival that has been known to pick both major crowd pleasers and award winners, including favourites like âSlumdog Millionaireâ, âPreciousâ, and âThe Kingâs Speechâ.
Vuyo Dabula heads an all-star cast that includes Hamilton Dhlamini, Zethu Dlomo, Kenneth Nkosi, Mduduzi Mabaso, Aubrey Poolo, Lizwi Vilakazi, Warren Masemola, Dean Fourie, Anthony Oseyemi, Brendon Daniels and Jerry Mofokeng. Cast by acclaimed casting director Moonyeenn Lee, the film also features people from local Eastern Cape communities in supporting roles, and introduces to the big screen Toka Mtabane, Vuyo Novokoza, Ntsika Tiyo, Sibusiso Bottoman, Abongile Sithole, and Qhawe Soroshi.
Sibusiso Bottoman in FIVE FINGERS FOR MARSEILLES
It tells the story of how, 20 years ago, the young âFive Fingersâ fought for the rural town of Marseilles, against brutal police oppression. Now, after fleeing in disgrace, Tau returns, seeking peace. Finding the town under new threat, he must reluctantly fight to free it. Will the Five Fingers stand again?
Writer Sean Drummond says the timing of the film is optimal. âGood Westerns always had socio-political undercurrents running through them,â says Drummond. âBy putting a highly entertaining, contemporary spin on this South African Western, the film explores subjects that resonate right now with many people.â
Ntsika Tiyo, Vuyo Novokoza, Sibusiso Bottoman, Toka Mtabane Abongile Sithole and Qhawe Soroshi in FIVE FINGERS FOR MARSEILLES.
âFive Fingers for Marseillesâ will be released in South Africa by Indigenous Film Distribution. âThe film is a perfect fit for the much-respected festivalâs independent spirit,â says Helen Kuun, CEO of Indigenous Fil Distribution. ââFive Fingers for Marseillesâ will screen alongside new works from filmmakers known for taking stylistic and thematic risks with their work.â
Major TIFF titles include âThe Shape of Waterâ by Guillermo del Toro (US), Darren Aronofskyâs âmother!â (US), starring Jennifer Lawrence, and âBreatheâ by Andy Serkis (UK). Aaron Sorkin makes his directorial debut with âMollyâs Gameâ (US), starring Idris Elba and Jessica Chastain. Also on the programme schedule are âI Love You, Daddyâ by Louis C.K.; Andrew Haighâs much-anticipated âLean on Peteâ; action maestro John Wooâs âManhuntâ; âRedoubtableâ, Michel Hazanaviciusâ glimpse into the life of Jean-Luc Godard; Hirokazu Koreedaâs âThe Third Murderâ; and a Michael Jackson twofer: John Landisâ âMichael Jacksonâs Thriller 3Dâ, preceded by Jerry Kramerâs âMaking of Michael Jacksonâs Thrillerâ.
âFive Fingers for Marseillesâ was awarded Best South African Film in Development at the Durban FilmMartâs finance forum in 2013. It was produced by Drummond and Matthewsâ Be Phat Motel Film Company and Yaron Schwartzman and Asger Hussain of Game 7 Films, in association with Stage 5 Films and Above the Clouds. Schwartzman and Hussainâs previous credits include TIFF competition title âThe Paperboyâ, starring Zac Efron, Nicole Kidman and Matthew McConaughey, as well as TIFF 2009 Audience Award winner, âPreciousâ. âFive Fingers for Marseillesâ was also made possible with the backing of South Africaâs National Film & Video Foundation and the Department of Trade and Industry, and with additional support from Dupa Films.
âGiven the scale of the film, we are aiming to carve a new a new path for high-value South African films aimed at both a local and world audience,â says Drummond.
 SA feature competes at Toronto Film Festival was originally published on Artsvark
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