Moffie | Telescope Film
Moffie

Moffie

Critic Rating

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South Africa, 1968. 16-year-old Nicholas is drafted to fight in the Angolan border war. He is tormented by sergeants who strip soldiers of humanity, train them to become hateful killing machines, and abuse those who fail to conform. On top of it all, Nicholas must keep his sexuality a secret to avoid the ultimate punishment.

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What are critics saying?

100

San Francisco Chronicle

Set amid a group of freshly arrived white army conscripts who will be sent to fight communist guerrillas along the Angolan border in apartheid-era South Africa, it’s a riveting portrait of a particular time and place while also being a broader assault on the type of pressure-cooker masculinity where torture, cruelty, humiliation and racism are the coins of the realm.

100

San Francisco Chronicle by Cary Darling

Set amid a group of freshly arrived white army conscripts who will be sent to fight communist guerrillas along the Angolan border in apartheid-era South Africa, it’s a riveting portrait of a particular time and place while also being a broader assault on the type of pressure-cooker masculinity where torture, cruelty, humiliation and racism are the coins of the realm.

94

Paste Magazine

The bonds formed in Moffie are complicated, and defy neat resolutions. The viewer is left with many more questions than answers. In that sense, this film is a cautionary tale, a reminder of the stakes of possibly losing our collective humanity.

94

Paste Magazine by Aparita Bhandari

The bonds formed in Moffie are complicated, and defy neat resolutions. The viewer is left with many more questions than answers. In that sense, this film is a cautionary tale, a reminder of the stakes of possibly losing our collective humanity.

91

IndieWire by Ryan Lattanzio

The way the editing (by Alain Dessauvage and George Hanmer) so gracefully unfolds from present to past suggests a kind of cinematic Proustian madeleine, conjuring how involuntary memories can be jolted again by encounters in the present.

88

The Associated Press by Jake Coyle

By burrowing within the brutal propaganda of apartheid, Hermanus, in his intensely expressive, achingly sorrowful fourth film, has captured a mean machinery at work — one that still abides, long after the end of apartheid.

80

Wall Street Journal by Joe Morgenstern

The filmmaking is strong and confident throughout, while Mr. Brummer’s performance is a constant revelation.

80

Los Angeles Times by Robert Abele

Hermanus, as a Black, queer South African, isn’t about to paint Nicholas’ predicament as on a par with apartheid’s true victims. But the emotional intelligence he infuses Moffie with — all the way through its inevitable march to the front line — feels personal nonetheless, and empathetically inquisitive about the kind of masculine indoctrination that fuels oppression through rituals of violence and the criminalizing of identity.

80

Film Threat by Alex Saveliev

Kai Luke Brummer is a revelation in the central role, his introverted performance buoying the plot with nuance and charisma. We navigate through the horrors right alongside him, and we root for him, and in the end, despite a striking and sad realization, we gaze at the ocean and wonder if there’s hope for humanity yet.

75

The A.V. Club by Lawrence Garcia

At its worst, Hermanus’ forceful direction can land with this sort of thudding literality. But befitting its harrowing subject of young men hammered into rigid conformity, Moffie leaves a lasting mark all the same.

70

The New York Times by Glenn Kenny

In depicting the horrific specifics of this particular man’s awful military experience, Hermanus delivers in abundance.

67

Austin Chronicle by Steve Davis

Although Moffie is competently executed, its genre-straddling will leave you vaguely unsatisfied if you decide too quickly the kind of movie it should be.

25

Slant Magazine by William Repass

Oliver Hermanus’s film is a rumination on the consequences of apartheid on those who benefit from it most.