Carola Ash, Dianne Beatty, Guillaume Benski, Roberto Cipullo, Jimmy de Brabant, Kwesi Dickson, Michael Dounaev, Ilann Girard, Skady Lis, Stephen Margolis, Kami Naghdi, Gherardo Pagliei, Christine Raspillere, Luciano Sovena, Andro Steinborn, Jean-Luc Van D
Screenplay:
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Cameraman:
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Composer:
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Cast:
Joseph Fiennes, Dennis Haysbert, Diane Kruger, Patrick Lyster, Shiloh Henderson, Tyrone Keogh, Megan Smith, Jessica Manuel, Faith Ndukwana, Terry...
Runtime:
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MPAA Rating:
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In Theaters:
11 April 2007 Belgium
Distribution:
Image Entertainment, United International Pictures, A-Film Distribution, Sandrew Metronome Distribution Sverige AB, Warner Home Video, Distribution Company, Bir Film, Prorom Media -Trade
Based on the memoirs of Nelson Mandela's prison guard.
South Africa – 1968.
Twenty-five million blacks are ruled by a minority of four million whites under the brutal Apartheid regime of the Nationalist Party Government. Blacks have no vote, no land rights, no rights to freedom of movement, no right to own a business, to housing, or to education. Determined to retain power, the whites ban all black opposition organisations, forcing their leaders into exile or imprisoning them for life on Robben Island.
James Gregory, a typical white Afrikaner, regards blacks as subhuman. Having grown up on a farm in the Transkei, he learned to speak Xhosa at an early age. This makes him an ideal choice to become the warder in charge of Mandela and his comrades on Robben Island. After all, Gregory speaks their language and can spy on them without them knowing it. However, the plan backfires. Through Mandela’s influence, Gregory’s allegiance gradually shifts from the racist government to the struggle for a free South Africa.
Goodbye Bafana tracks the unlikely but profound relationship between these two men. Through their unique friendship, we witness not only Gregory’s growing awareness of man’s inhumanity to man, but South Africa’s evolution from Apartheid to a vibrant democracy.
This story, which documents how Mandela became the most inspirational political figure of the modern world, poses the questions: Who is the prisoner? And who sets whom free?