1963. Thirteen year old Molly Roth, the eldest of three offspring of Gus and Diana Roth, lives a carefree life as part of the affluent white minority in South Africa. Race is a non-issue for... Read all1963. Thirteen year old Molly Roth, the eldest of three offspring of Gus and Diana Roth, lives a carefree life as part of the affluent white minority in South Africa. Race is a non-issue for her as although, under apartheid, the Roths largely exist among other white people like t... Read all1963. Thirteen year old Molly Roth, the eldest of three offspring of Gus and Diana Roth, lives a carefree life as part of the affluent white minority in South Africa. Race is a non-issue for her as although, under apartheid, the Roths largely exist among other white people like them, she feels equally comfortable around the black people in her life, such as their serv... Read all
- Won 1 BAFTA Award
- 7 wins & 12 nominations total
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Featured reviews
The film works best, however, as a portrait of a troubled family. It carefully and truthfully depicts the agony of an adolescent girl who knows that her parents are trying to change her world for the better but at the expense of a normal life for her and her siblings. As Gillian Slovo so accurately stated, 'Here we were going off to Girl Guides while our parents were advocating the violent overthrow of our country's government.'
This film makes a powerful and moving, yet personal statement.
That the film succeeds more on a personal level in no way diminishes its political message, which unlike other anti-Apartheid dramas is never force-fed in condescending spoonfuls ("I know that already; stop treating me like a baby!" cries the frustrated young heroine after yet another lecture from mom). No easy solutions are offered, and the film ends in just another riot, suggesting with cautious optimism the hope for ultimate victory after what promises to be a long and difficult struggle.
True, there are moments of real poignancy in "A world apart" and Jodhi May is an excellent actress but there just doesn't seem to be much going on for most of half the film. Maybe the fact that apartheid has been defeated and that so much has happened in S. Africa since makes it less momentous.
For anyone interested in S. Africa, I recommend watching "Cry Freedom", "A white dry season" or even "The power of one" instead. These films at least seek to explain their characters involvement with the anti-apartheid movement. In "A world apart", there's no such character growth so far as the mother is concerned. Her involvement has to be taken for granted.
It's one of several movies about the impact of South African apartheid in the late 1980s, but this one is a bit different. Instead of being centered more on the struggle itself, Miss May, the viewpoint character, is more an unwilling witness to the fact that while it's nice to be well-to-do, not everyone can blithely accept that, especially the disenfranchised and those with a sense of justice. The performances are excellent, but even though Miss May's journey from an easy childhood to a committed adulthood is a difficult one, it hardly raises my sympathy, as it clearly is meant to.
Did you know
- TriviaThe first non-collaborative film score composed by Hans Zimmer.
- Quotes
Muller: [threateningly in interrogation] Do you miss your children?
[pause]
Muller: Why don't you answer?
Diana Roth: Because it's a stupid question.
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Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $2,326,860
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $20,815
- Jun 19, 1988
- Gross worldwide
- $2,326,860
- Runtime
- 1h 52m(112 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1