The Two of Us (2014) Poster

(2014)

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8/10
Watch beautiful elegiac storytelling being mastered.
supatube6 August 2015
'The Two of Us' is about a pair of siblings who really help each other grow up in the township of Alexandra, Johannesburg, South Africa. Thulani, a hardened thief and general badass, is tough and strict on his younger sister, Zanele, who is just starting to blossom into a beautiful young lady. This adds tension to their relationship, as he's unflinching when it comes to men getting near his sister, in spite of her natural curiosity. And he becomes violent, which just pushes her away, towards a sugar daddy.

The story unfolds with a slow sense of dread and the inevitable fate of a tragedy seems eminent. But what makes, 'Thina Sobabili' so tense is the many angles from which this tragedy may strike. When the truth is revealed about how the two came to live without their parents the pace of the film slows down as every realisation washes through over.

'Thina Sobabili' deals with some very heavy subject matter: child abuse, broken families and school girls dating old men for 'gifts', and at times feels like its going to crumble into a melodramatic piece of fluff but never does. Ernest Nkosi has managed to keep the story on its rails all the way to the end. The end, however, does seem like it's shooting too hard at sentimentality, and misses, but still brings the film to a defining end.

The film feels like it was going in the usual South African drama manner, with sad beats and very little hope of a bright ending but with a few intense images the film surpasses the usual drab and taps into something darker. There is an air of Extreme cinema in 'Thina Sobabili' that lies more so in the subject matter than the filmmaking. That being said, a shoestring budget and shooting time of one week leaves very little for truly outrageous imagery. I will be keeping my eye on Ernest Nkosi with hopes that he incorporates some horror into his storytelling in the future. He may just set South Africa affright.

The music. Oh damn, the music. So magical. So touching. You can hear the main song in the soundtrack. Go have a listen. Tell me it doesn't affect you. The soft groaning and moaning really works so beautifully in this film.

If you get the chance to see 'Thina Sobaili' I would strongly recommend it as the film really gives you the most dramatic slice of township life for youths trying to just grow up. Watch beautiful elegiac storytelling being mastered.
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9/10
Profound Harsh yet Poetic View of Domestic Abuse and its Unexpected Results
AirBourne_Bds25 October 2015
Warning: Spoilers
This is an amazing film of incredible poignancy far beyond the tender years of the cast and crew of this watershed production! If Shakespeare was African, this would have been his first story - a mother who for the sake of peace abandons her own children; a street thief who punishes himself for what he saw as a child with his own sister's unrecalled tragedy as an infant and unrequited love leading to bitter denouement no one will ever forget...

There is much in South African culture which echoes in both Barbadian and Caribbean lifestyles - when an abused woman endures cruelty for financial support or how Government officials resort to child prostitutes for favours and even their taxis resemble the Route Taxis in Bridgetown.

The cinematography and slices of Township life as either hard or beautiful as a switch between scenes and sub-plots is also very elegant. None of the film cast and crew are over 30 yet have insights towards the blessed and damned of Human Nature which far belies their youth.

Look for them on Indie Go-Go to help them on their travels to see if the short feature can be placed in Oscars and Golden Globes, they are travelling the world and it is not cheap...
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