The
Wound *** ½ / *****
Directed
by: John
Trengove.
Written
by: Malusi
Bengu & Thando Mgqolozana & John Trengove.
Starring:
Nakhane
Toure (Xolani), Bongile Mantsai (Vija), Niza Jay (Kwanda), Thobani Mseleni
(Babalo).
The most difficult sequence to
watch in The Wound comes right near the beginning. The film is set in rural
South Africa, among the Xhosa community, whose young men undergo ritual
circumcision when they are teenagers. They are taken into the mountains, where
one after another, they are circumcised, and then spend weeks out there, with
some elders, having the ideals of masculinity drilled into their heads. You
don’t see much during the circumcisions themselves – but you hear it, and it’s
a difficult sequence to sit through. But that’s only the beginning.
The film basically centers on
three characters. Xolani (Nakhane Toure) is one of the “caregivers” – older
members of the community, who help to oversee the boys in the weeks after the
circumcision. He doesn’t much care for this ritual anymore, but he spends the
weeks there every year, because it allows him to spend time with Vija (Bongile
Mantsai), another caregiver. The two have a longstanding sexual relationship
that happens every year – and Xolani wants it to be more than that. Vija does a
better job at presenting the masculine ideal they are teaching, and doesn’t see
Xolani the same way. He’s married, with kids, and does little more than use
Xolani every year. The third character is Kwanda (Niza Jay), one of the boys
undergoing the ritual. He’s from Johannesburg, and his father has brought him
out here because he fears Kwanda is going soft. Even he doesn’t suspect that
his son is gay – the worst thing he can be in this community. It doesn’t take
Kwanda, who is the smartest of the boys out there, to read the situation, and
figure out what is happening between Xolani and Vija. Kwanda wants to be more
open in his identity – but it scares Xolani.
The tension in the film steadily
builds, as the secrets and lies eventually start coming out. The film is about
the damage these secrets do to those keeping them – and how a culture of toxic
masculinity and homophobia, poisons everything it touches. You get to know,
like and understand Xolani – you feel for him, because he’s trapped, and
doesn’t see a way out. You don’t really like Vija – who is a user and
hypocrite, or even really Kwanda – you admire him a little for his willingness
to try and burn this system to the ground, but he’s also more than a little bit
of a whiner.
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