Friday 4 October 2013

Representing South Africa, With A Little Britain Thrown In - Dust Devil (1992)


Rewatching Dust Devil, it's what I wish would exist more often in horror cinema. Too often it repeats itself in the least interesting ways even when it's supposed to be intelligent. There are thousands of horror films in existence, and many of them are sadly not good. Dust Devil is thankfully made with a lot more on its side. Set during political upheaval, three individuals are interlinked together. A woman (Chelsea Field) who had left her husband after feeling she is suffocated in the suburbia. A widowed police detective (Zakes Mokae) who, as the police force is slowly being broken down and disbanded, is left on his own to track down a killer who commits ritualistic bloodbaths with his victims' bodies. Then there's the killer himself (Robert John Burke), a man with no name, a vagabond, who is not just a man but a being of magic who has existed for aeons. From the beginning, for some of the criticisms you can land of the film, Dust Devil is a unique creation with such craftwork to it. Visually splendid, it drags you into its atmospheric tone with its sweeping deserts, lost country roads, and slowly decaying and dying towns. Given a chance to do what he desired to make, the director Stanley uses numerous types of camera movements, visual manipulations, and choices in composition and lighting that stand out immensely. It creates a sense of something completely alien, melding the political strife of the period with the ancient and the nightmarish. The politics, the apartheid of South Africa slowly crumbling to pieces, complicate the story further, adding greater layers to the material as the human landscape shown is left desolate and lost, an environment in confusion where there is tension between everyone before even taking into consideration the being of darkness posing as a handsome, mysterious traveler. Already with this, Dust Devil stands so much above countless other genre films in how it is presented and what the content is.

From http://static.wix.com/media/ff562f_f0d30a2dff0c4a6ad36568dddc3d4706.jpg

For pieces of it so clearly connectable to other films, there's others that make the film stand out, and unfortunately "unsellable", including being butchered in length by Miramax. That the detective is a balding, older black African man. The heavy use of ritual and magic, through a former film projectionist/shaman (John Matshikiza) who acts as the narrator and the consort for explaining the danger of the killer. What starts with an understandable plot, of a supernatural mass murderer who encounters a woman alone by herself, is pushed into unconventional corners. Whether it's the atmospheric use of whale songs over sand dunes, or the abstract flourishes such as a watch whose hands are moving fast, the film feels like the creation of a director given only one chance to show what he could do, but he went further and used this sense of desperation to create such an unconventional work that seeps in its own particular, cohesive world. The setting is already effecting, a place of lost souls for the titular being to harvest, but it is unsettling in its violence and the special effects. Braver is the fact that, when most genre films now pull mythology through realism or candy coat it, this film is effectively the ancient, supernatural world making itself known on a rational, chaotic place, and the characters having to accept it instead of a rationalistic explanation to explain everything. It will take some people off guard how this irrational supernatural mood eventually effects the tone and structure of the film's plot, making its continuous narration actually justifiable practical, even if it's both a flaw but also a virtue in how it adds to its unconventionality. By its end, in an abandoned town buried in sand, the abstraction completely takes over the structure, and while it may put some off, it reaches a grand crescendo that is compelling for this viewer.

From http://isaacspictureconclusions.files.wordpress.com/2013/05/dd5.jpg?w=800&h=441

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