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Reconciliation, If Not Truth, in Clint Eastwood's Invictus

Aside from Morgan Freeman, who makes a fabulous Nelson Mandela, there's this to savor about Invictus, a rosy tale of racial reconciliation neatly wrapped in a triumphalist sports movie: The film is blessedly free of Obama parallels. Also, we could use a happy global moment, and Eastwood picks one out of the otherwise rocky history of South Africa, when the country's first post-apartheid president stepped out of the jail where he'd languished for 27 years and firmly set aside revenge politics in favor of national unity.

Healing hands: Freeman as Mandela
Keith Bernstein
Healing hands: Freeman as Mandela

Details

Invictus
Directed by Clint Eastwood
Warner Bros.
Opens December 11

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More than most, Mandela understood the cohesive power of the symbol—in this case, the bright green uniform of the South African rugby team the Springboks, echoing the flag equally beloved by whites and hated by blacks under apartheid. Adapted by South African writer Anthony Peckham from a book by former London Independent journalist John Carlin, Invictus tells the story of how Mandela, with help from the Afrikaner team captain, Francois Pienaar (Matt Damon, gym-pumped into Michelin Man and oozing fair play), turned a World Cup rugby match into a moment of rainbow solidarity.

Like every Eastwood production, Invictus is stately, handsomely mounted, attentive to detail right down to the Marmite adorning the team's breakfast buffet, and relentlessly conventional. As a portrait of a hero, the movie effortlessly brings a lump to the throat (Freeman gives a subtly crafted performance that blends Mandela's physical frailty with his easy charm and cerebral wit); as history, it is borderline daft and selective to the point of distortion. It's true that you can't shoehorn a nation's history into a single movie, but Peckham's dialogue, stuffed with strenuously underlined exposition, blazes an indecently fast trail from mutual suspicion to interracial love and understanding.

The powerful dislike between Mandela's black and white bodyguards melts into reverence for their leader and joint cheerleading for the team. Within minutes of their enforced arrival in the shantytowns, the Springboks (including Eastwood's cute son, Scott, who gets plenty of money shots) are happily hoisting adoring little black boys onto their shoulders. Pienaar's parents' maid gets tickets to the cup final, where she and the mistress sit side-by-side, rib-poking with every home-team score.

Never mind that many white supremacists fled abroad to seethe in safety over the end of white privilege. Never mind that the ANC, the very movement that had worked for years to free Mandela and bring down apartheid, is confined here to a lone reductive scene that dismisses a complex resistance group as a bunch of thuggish ideologues. And Winnie Mandela, who is no picnic but deserves a place in this story, is kicked out of the movie altogether, save for a couple of cheap gibes at her betrayal of her long-suffering husband. She and the extremist wing of the ANC have a right to more nuanced exposure in Invictus, if only to acknowledge the unpalatable truth that apartheid manufactured more monsters than it did dignified heroes with forgiveness in their hearts.

That Mandela is a great man is beyond dispute—but that's no excuse to position him in a Great Man theory of history. In the end, Invictus becomes what almost every Eastwood movie becomes: an inquiry into masculinity shaped in the director's own image, with the answers already supplied.

Eastwood can't play his own wounded hero this time, but his perennial ideal is all here in Mandela the courtly gentleman, Mandela the elderly yet still potent flirt, Mandela the dry wit—above all, in Mandela the rugged individualist who won't toe the PC line when duty suggests otherwise. Manning up in Eastwoodland has matured with age, from "Revenge is sweet" (the final scene in Unforgiven) to "The best revenge is living well." Maybe, but in real life, that's not enough. Mandela befriended his prison guards and refused to make enemies of South African whites, including his former tormentors. Yet for all his lovely manners, his donations to worthy causes, his insistence on pouring his own tea, or even his high-minded dedication to reconciling former enemies, South Africa today is a muddle of hope and despair.

For the record, I cried my way through the climactic game, with all its kitschy slow-mo lopes around the pitch, its roar of the crowd and peripheral melodrama. But I came out feeling had. How Invictus will play in the North American multiplex (foreign sport + foreign country = not promising) is a lot less interesting than its reception in Johannesburg and—perhaps more significantly—in the townships, where conditions remain abysmal and communities are decimated by a long-untended AIDS epidemic that makes our own crisis look like a tea party. Today's South Africa has been many decades in the making, and it is the product not of one good man but of movements full of courageous men and women who almost certainly rose to power before they were ready. But as they say in the pitch meetings, where's the glamour in that?

 
  • Marie 05/21/2010 3:24:00 AM

    I am surprised with your review. Did you read the book? The book is a detailed account of the impact of team sports on creating common ground amongst people, in this case, blacks and whites rallying around rugby, but the same thing happens with football, soccer and more. People from disparate backgrounds rally around teams all the time. This was not about the entire history of apparteid, nor about Nelson Mandela's personal life, it was about rugby and the political role it played on bringing a country together. To cover all the things you would like covered, it would have to be a 12 hour minimum documentary, not a 2 hour movie. I think your criticism of the movie is based on a lack of knowledge. It's always a good idea to read the book before seeing a movie because then you will understand what the movie is based on and the message the author and director are trying to convey.

  • David Beattie 02/26/2010 7:28:00 AM

    This is a brave, honest review. Perhaps, as Leon writes, you have not been to South Africa, something it is not necessary to do to have insight into that sad nation's history, and its present. I am a South African, born and bred. I was in the South African Police for three years - 1977, '78 and '79. I was a newspaper journalist in Durban and Johannesburg for three years. Perhaps because I did not live there in 1995, I too should be disqualified from comment. The fact of the matter is that selecting a single aspect of history and showcasing it to this degree is a massive disservice in so many ways. That Mandela and many blacks appear to have forgiven the brutal white regime so easily suggests to whites who still live there that maybe the regime was not so bad after all. No, a prolonged, cold, vicious and calculated crime against humanity was committed and more to the point, still continues. Sixteen years after the first free election South Africa now has the world's widest gap between rich and poor, or among the very worst. Business Report, September 2009. "South Africa has overtaken Brazil as the country with the widest gap between rich and poor, according to figures put together by a leading South African academic. Haroon Bhorat, an economics professor at UCT, told a briefing at Parliament on Friday that South Africa was now "the most unequal society in the world" with a significant increase in income inequality. "In the long run it is bad for growth. It is a threat to social stability and to growth itself. The long-run trend is a worrying one," he warned. The temptation for you Leon, and people of your ilk, will be to say the figures have been manipulated by this guy, because he is not white. Actually, a recent World Bank report says the same thing. Now, do not try to claim that this is just a movie that stands on its own. It is nothing of the sort - it is being used as an emblem, a totem of apparent reconciliation; that is what gives it its poignancy. Without the political context it is just an important rugby match, like the current Winter Olympics in Vancouver are so important to Canada, ice hockey fans especially. The fact is that the emperor has no clothes. Mandela is a great man, but he made mistakes. To buy a peaceful transition he made far too many concessions. And what galls me is that when I go to South Africa now (I have lived in Vancouver since 1988) nearly all of the whites COMPLAIN about their lot, even though nearly all that I know live in amazing material comfort. You still don't get it do you? Whites in that country need to make far, far greater sacrifices to heal that nation properly, and to make progress. Johan says "for that one moment everyone in SA forgot about our differences and all our problems." Johan, if you are white, you probably have few problems compared to the majority of your countrymen. If you are not, or you are poor, then that is different. As for the "moment giving everyone hope and a vision of how things could be," it is more a case of how they SHOULD be (sorry for the all upper-case yelling, can't do italics on here.) That they are not is both a failure of successive ANC governments - and of the white elite which holds the majority of capital and expertise. That capital and expertise has been very grudgingly shared, from day one, until now. Given the historical background, this is disappointing and very dangerous. The great, great irony is that Mandela is a hero, a brave brave person who could see through the rhetoric and fanfare and hero worship - and that person's name is Winnie Mandela! You are heading for a cliff my friends. Keep the singing and dancing of World Cup Rugby Day in mind when that day comes.

  • Taz 12/12/2009 2:04:00 AM

    Ella, you mention that "Invictus" is based on John Carlin's book, but that book is specifically about this time and event in South Africa - and the roles that Mandela and Pienaar played. I recommend it highly, it is a very enjoyable read. The book's focus was not on whites fleeing the country, the efforts of the ANC, or the indomitable Winnie Mandela.Therefore, a "more nuanced exposure" of those things has no place in this particular story. It is impossible to overstate the immense joy of that day to a non-South African that wasn't there. I also believe the scale of celebration is not something that is experienced in the US with US sports set up as they are. You really did have to be there - EVERYONE in the country was celebrating deliriously. Together. As someone (white) who was hanging out my window scream-singing "Shosholoza" with a bunch of (black) security guards sitting in a parking lot below - I guarantee you those scenes and many more like them were real. When that final whistle blew, the ENTIRE country dropped to its knees with Francois Pienaar. The fact that you cried your way through the climactic finale warms my heart. I personally will be balancing a box of tissues with my popcorn on my knees tonight.

  • Johan 12/11/2009 3:15:00 PM

    You seem to think that the movie's climax is an exaggeration. I can promise you that it isn't. For that one moment everyone in SA forgot about our differences and all our problems. People we're hugging each other in the streets. All divisions of class and race were forgotten. I'll cherish the memory for the rest of my life. Of course the euphoria eventually faded away, but that moment gave everyone hope and a vision of how things could be.

  • Leon 12/11/2009 10:29:00 AM

    O Please Ella, your political soapboxing is so misguided and irrelevant it shameful. Write a movie review not social or historical comment, especially when its clear you are relying on facts not sourced from own experience. Invictus is a true story and trying to cram every detail of my country's past into that film would be ridiculous to say the least. Rather stick to stuff you know (reviewing teenage nonsense like New Moon) next time before venturing into political commentary on a country I doubt you've been to.

 

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