district 9 Flashcards
what did the white national party do? (1948)
- set up apartheid which prevented the growth of african cinema
- state censorship prevented the public from wathcing certain international films that questioned race and politics, esp racial conflicts
- film was used by that state to produce recruitment movies, aimed at recruiting a black african workforce for the gold mines.
what was the subsidy system?
apartheid government gave small sums of money / cheap loans to enable films to be made.
- the government checked the films and only supported films that supported their own racist ideology
- this meant that films on south africa esp in 70s were poor quality
what happened to film after nelson mandela became leader?
money was given to people who were silenced in order to make movies on the experiences of apartheid and all of the terrible treatment.
district 9 profit
considering its large-ish budget, the film has to try and be popular at the box office.
budget: £30,000,000
worldwide £210,888,950
who was district 9 funded by?
district 9 is a good example of a film that is funded by foreign money that looks at the struggles in south africa
funded by interational money:
- international (USA)
- wingnut films (NZ)
- tristar pictures (USA)
comparison: TSOTSI funding
funded by SA national film and video foundation (emphasis on disadvantaged groups) & UK film and tv production company
comparison: TSOTSI plot
follows a homeless child who becomes a leader of a gang then gets arrested/shot - D9 deals with similar themes to tsotsi such as crime, and disadvantage
comparison: TSOTSI profit
cost: £3,000,000
worldwide: £11,300,000