Catch a Fire is confident enough to depict the battle from all sides.
Catch a Fire (2006)
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Reviews Counted:136
Fresh:103
Rotten:33
Average Rating:6.7/10
Consensus: No stranger to the political thriller, director Phillip Noyce tackles apartheid and terrorism with experienced gusto, while Derek Luke and Tim Robbins hand in nuanced performances.
Rated: PG-13 [See Full Rating] for thematic material involving torture and abuse, violence and brief language.
Runtime: 1 hr 42 mins
Genre: Dramas
Theatrical Release:Oct 27, 2006 Wide
Box Office: $4,291,965
Synopsis: Powerfully telling the story of a South African hero's journey to freedom, Catch a Fire is the new film from director Phillip Noyce (The Quiet American, Rabbit-Proof Fence). The political thriller... Powerfully telling the story of a South African hero's journey to freedom, Catch a Fire is the new film from director Phillip Noyce (The Quiet American, Rabbit-Proof Fence). The political thriller takes place during the country's turbulent and divided times in the early 1980s, and in the new South Africa of today. Derek Luke portrays real-life hero Patrick Chamusso. Patrick is a charming and loving husband to his wife Precious (Bonnie Henna), and a caring father to his two young daughters. He works as a foreman at the centrally located Secunda oil refinery, which is a symbol of South Africa's self-sufficiency at a time when the world was protesting the country's oppressive apartheid system. In his spare time, Patrick coaches a local boys' soccer team. Carefully toeing the hard line imposed on blacks by apartheid, Patrick is completely apolitical. Academy Award winner Tim Robbins plays Nic Vos, a Colonel in the country's Police Security Branch. The shrewd and charismatic Vos strives to maintain order in volatile situations, which have become more and more frequent as the outlawed activist organization African National Congress (ANC) rallies blacks against apartheid. Vos is also concerned for the safety of his wife and two daughters. He and his family live a world away from the Chamusso family ... until the innocent Patrick comes under suspicion and is arrested (in June 1980) for sabotage of the Secunda oil refinery. His alibi is compromised, and Patrick is desperate to shield Precious from a past indiscretion and keep his job. But he is ill-prepared to withstand brutal interrogations by Vos' men. As Vos further insinuates himself into the lives of the Chamussos, to Patrick's shock and shame, Precious herself is jailed and tortured. Although he and Precious are soon released from custody, Patrick is stunned into action and completely reorients his sense of self and purpose. He leaves his family to join up with the ANC. Becoming a rebel fighter and political operative, Patrick is radicalized on behalf of his people and his country. He ultimately envisions a formidable and dangerous follow-up strike against the Secunda refinery, risking his own life and future. Change must and will come, for Patrick and his family, and for South Africa itself. --© Focus Features [More]
Starring: Derek Luke, Tim Robbins, Bonnie Henna, Mncedisi Shabangu
Starring: Derek Luke, Tim Robbins, Bonnie Henna, Mncedisi Shabangu, Tumisho K. Masha, Sithembiso Khumalo, Terry Pheto, Michele Burgers, Malcolm Purkey
Director: Phillip Noyce
Director: Phillip Noyce
Screenwriter: Shawn Slovo
Producer: Robert Bevan, Eric Fellner, Anthony Minghella
Studio: Focus Features
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Reviews for Catch a Fire
Noyce's instincts for suspense are so potent that Catch a Fire works as a thriller even if you ignore his politics.
Moderately moving but not truly shattering, as you might expect of a film with this theme;...its impact is more intellectual than visceral.
Had it been released twenty years ago, it would have had a better chance of catching on with audiences.
This thriller makes for some exciting viewing, with memorable performances by Tim Robbins and Derek Luke.
While this "political thriller" features plenty of action and reaction, it also leads to a kind of transcendent and yet also immediate, very earthly peace, as Derek Luke and Patrick Chamusso share the screen under the closing credits.
'Catch a Fire' is proof that revenge may be a dish that's best not served at all.
This isn’t a movie of stark, black-and-white villainy. Instead, you get a real sense of the controlling impulses that power breeds.
"Catch a Fire" is an excellent real-life story with a social conscience.
Timely in theme, Catch a Fire resonates because it is about an issue from a time not so long ago -- apartheid ended in 1991 -- with which we can still identify.
'Catch a Fire' gets off to a slow start, but once the suspense kicks in, it's a riveting movie with superb performances by Robbins and Luke.
Slovo's script is refreshingly ambiguous, never showing Patrick as a plaster saint nor Vos as a mustache-twirling villain.
an emotionally jarring film for many reasons. As an indictment of injustice on a universal level, it is without peer. As a political thriller, it is riveting. But it's as a cautionary tale that it is most powerful.
Patrick Chamusso, the refinery foreman played by Derek Luke in Catch a Fire, brims with energy, whether he's dancing to a Donna Summer song or coaching the local youth soccer team.
The whole thing leaves you feeling confused, especially the dénouement. That is not what good moviemaking is all about.
Robbins tips the balance with his one-dimensional performance, and the earnest script follows in kind, settling for the sort of paternalistic take on black power and dignity that has dogged virtually every film like this.
It's a bit too neatly constructed, but Noyce's skills are sharp as ever.
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