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"An international sensation, The GODS MUST
BE CRAZY is one of the most original, thought-provoking and entertaining
comedies ever."
Reoccurring quote from various characters: "I
don't want to talk about it."
The film starts with the fine narrator, Paddy
Obyrne, introducing Xixo and his tribe, who live deep in the Kalahari
desert, showing how they simply live comfortably in such an environment
with little water. They had no knowledge of modern civilization,
and shared everything with each other in peaceful harmony.
The narrator then shows a modern city in South
Africa, explaining how modern man lives in the opposite way of
the Bushmen. Instead of living in harmony with their environment,
they create new environments and must live by all kinds of rules.
They must change to keep up with the environment they have created.
The story then starts with a young newspaper page
editor, Kate Thompson, in a high pressure job, deciding to be
a teacher for awhile to get away from the rat race culture she
finds herself in.
Several storylines are told by the narrator, and
he switches back and forth between them, giving a short introduction
as to what is happening in each chapter of each story. The storylines
involve, Xixo, the rebels, the school teacher and the micro-biologist.
The storylines begin to intertwine in various combinations, and
all come together in the last 25 minutes of the story.
One storyline follows the travails of a small
tribe of Bushmen. When a cola bottle that was carelessly thrown
from an airplane into the Kalahari desert, a new, miracle tool,
harder than wood or bone, was introduced into Xixo's tribal family
of Bush People. While it was found to be useful for all kinds
of things, it caused fighting among family members for the first
time, who suddenly weren't willing to share it, as they had always
shared all possessions. Tribal family leader, Xixo (N!xau), decides
that the cola bottle was evil, and needed to be returned to the
gods, who must of been crazy to give it to them in the first place.
He first tries to bury it outside of camp. A hyena digs it up,
and Xixo's children find it and have a big fight over it. Xixo
plans to walk to the end of the world and throw this trouble causing
thing away.
Another storyline follows the mishaps of a micro-biologist,
Alan, who is working on his thesis. During the first part of the
movie, shy, accident-prone Andrew Steyn (Marious Weyers) is asked
by the Reverend (Jamie Uys himself) to drive the newspaper editor
- turned - new school teacher, Kate Thompson (Sandra Prinsloo)
over rough terrain to her new school in his troublesome jeep,
correctly named "The Anti-Christ." At this moment in time, this
sorry excuse for a vehicle has no brakes, and won't start again
if the engine stops.
Everything that can go wrong, does! Kate is kept
waiting because Alan has some difficulty with the road gates and
the hills around the gates, which is sure to amuse the audience.
He finally manages to pick up Kate, after she has to wait awhile,
which doesn't start things off on the right foot. The longer that
Kate, Alan, and The Anti-Christ are together, the more Alan looks
like an idiot, as he bumbles, stumbles all over the place in front
of her! Very much like in a Woody Allen movie, in that it is a
comedy of errors, which include slapstick comedy, incriminating
situations and ill-timed words by Allen.
A favorite sequence of scenes starts with the
jeep getting stuck in the river, and ends the next morning with
The Anti-Christ cranked up in the tree! Things go down hill fast
when The Anti-Christ gets stuck in a muddy river. After an unexpected
dip in the river, they have to spend the night, with such occurrences
as a fire-dancing rhino, a protective wart hog, and unexpected
tribal friends. While she doesn't see the wart hog chase Alan
into her, or witness the rhino putting out their campfire, seeing
two tribal men appear unexpectedly made her trust Alan enough
to stay with him. The next morning, Alan attaches the cord from
the jeep's motorized crank to a high branch on shore. While the
crank is slowly pulling the jeep out of the water, Alan has to
rescue Kate, in a state of undress, from tree branches that have
grabbed her with stickers, while she was getting dressed.
Luckily, Alan's friend and helper, Mpudi (Michael
Thys) comes to their rescue when the tribal friends go and tell
him of the problems with The Anti-Christ. As they are slowly being
towed across the plain, along comes the suave, full of himself
tour director, Jack Hind (Nic De Jager) in his new tour bus. He
finishes the job by taking her to her new school. Once alone with
her in his tour bus, he deliberately discredits Alan when he fibs
to her that rhinos aren't the fire fighters of the plain, and
won't immediately put any fire out they see. It seems that he
also is interested in the new school teacher.
At this point, it doesn't look like Alan has a
chance to win her heart, especially when he makes a fool of himself
again when he tries to apologize to Kate in her new classroom
in front of her students, which is a sequence of scenes wonderfully
directed by Uys and performed by Marious Weyers.
Rather discouraged, Alan gets back to his camp
to learn of new trouble. It seems that while passing through a
farm in modern civilization , Xixo kills a farm animal to eat,
not understanding that it belonged to someone, and that people
in "modern society" have protected possessions. He is put into
jail. He doesn't eat for a week. Alan's friend, Mpudi, who was
called into interpret Xixo for the trial judge, knows that Xixo
will die in jail. So Alan and Mpudi arrange for Xixo to be able
to work off his sentence with Alan, as an environmental specialist.
Circumstances then arise that allows Alan to have
another chance to prove his worth and character to Kate. When
rebel leader, the slimy Sam Boga (Louw Verwey ) finds himself
and his band of rebels on the run from the authorities, he and
his armed men kidnap Kate Thompson and her school children, making
them march along as the rebelsā human shields. It is Alan and
friends to the rescue! However, once again, Jack Hind finds a
way to appear to be in charge of their efforts to rescue the hostages.
However, Kate, who probably heard what really happened from a
witness, also sees the truth about Alan's feelings for her in
an amusing sequence of scenes, which makes for a happy ending.
This hilarious screenplay was written by South
African writer/director Jamie Uys, who won the 1981 Grand Prix
at the Festival International du Film de Comedy Vevey. Under his
talented direction, Director Uys, on a low budget, using unknown
actors and his great script, created a wildly successful comedy
that was shown in the United States for three years.
Marious Weyers did a fantastic job portraying
good-hearted Alan Steyn, the smart, well-meaning micro-biologist,
who falls apart when he is around women. Weyers does a marvelous
job as being the straight man to all the slapstick and humorous
situations his character finds himself in. Weyers effortlessly
makes it all seem so natural, not contrived, which makes the scenes
hilariously funny. There are several favorite sequence of scenes.
His adventures with his awful jeep are all skillfully done, as
he courageously determines how to get around the disadvantages
of having a vehicle with no brakes and a deficient motor to accomplish
the most common tasks, like opening and closing road gates on
hills, etc.
His nervousness and subsequent missteps into slapstick
comedy when he is around Kate are all equally amusing, especially
the ones which happen when he is trying to tell Kate how he feels
about her.
Sandra Prinsloo does a great job portraying Kate
Thompson, a little bit of a city princess, used to a higher grade
of vehicle, and more socially poised men. She reacts beautifully
to all the adventures she undergoes as her character transforms
from a woman born in modern civilization to a person who rises
to the occasion to see the truth, and understand underlying human
value, that exists under outward appearances, as she adapts to
her new more natural, simpler environment, where people are seen
more clearly for who they are by their actions and motives.
N!xau, a real life Bushman, wonderfully portrays
himself as Nixo, who has a natural flair for comedy as well. While
N!xau speaks his native language, the narrator effectively translates
what he says, which makes the intertwining of these two cultures
authentic, adding a lot to the story.
A favorite sequence of scenes with N!au, is when
his character, Nixo, helps to covertly put the bad guys to sleep
so the possibility of escape and rescue exists for Kate and the
children.
If you enjoyed THE GODS MUST BE CRAZY, you will
love THE GODS MUST BE CRAZY II, and may like CROCODILE
DUNDEE, CROCODILE DUNDEE 2, GEORGE OF THE JUNGLE, TARZAN (1999), GREYSTROKE: THE LEGEND OF TARZAN - LORD OF THE APES, and TARZAN
AND HIS MATE.
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