Catch a Fire with Tim Robbins: DVD Cover
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Catch a Fire
a.k.a. Hotstuff Director: Phillip Noyce Cast: Tim Robbins, Derek Luke, Bonnie Henna, Mncedisi Shabangu

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  • DVD Release Date: 01/30/2007
  • Original Release: 2006
  • Rating: Rated PG13
  • Sales Rank: 6,497
 
  • Overview
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Scenes
  • Customer Reviews
  • Cast & Crew
  • Full Product Details

Scenes

Features

Audio commentary with director Phillip Noyce and cast; Deleted scenes

Full Product Details

Scene Index

Disc #1 -- Catch a Fire
1. Battle for South Africa (Main Titles) [7:24]
2. Police Inspection [4:36]
3. Just One Time Baas [5:20]
4. Target Practice [6:27]
5. Terrorist Attack [2:21]
6. Under Arrest [3:48]
7. Arousing Suspicion [5:04]
8. Sunday Lunch [4:25]
9. False Confession [5:26]
10. Making Things Right [3:40]
11. Fighting for Freedom [4:38]
12. Paperwork [6:17]
13. In the Line of Duty [:18]
14. Training Camp [2:29]
15. Border Crossing [4:21]
16. Drastic Measures [3:30]
17. Evacuate the Plant! [6:31]
18. Capture [5:46]
19. Forgiveness [3:51]
20. End Titles [7:49]

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

An apolitical South African oil-refinery worker and soccer coach is forced into terrorism as a means of fighting back against the brutality of the apartheid regime in director Phillip Noyce's dramatic look at the life of one-time political prisoner and freedom fighter Patrick Chamusso. In the 1980s, Patrick (Derek Luke) and his wife Precious (Bonnie Henna) lived a peaceful life until one fateful day, when on an overnight trip with his team, Patrick is singled out as the prime suspect in a bombing at the refinery. Placed in solitary confinement, with his wife and family brutalized by government agent Nic Vos (Tim Robbins), the young family man is eventually cleared of charges, but his life is in shambles. Devastated and distraught, Patrick soon begins working as a rebel fighter and political operative for Nelson Mandela's African National Congress. As the oppressed country's powerful apartheid regime continues to torture and torment its citizens, the now-radicalized Patrick must disappear from his family without a trace and go undercover if he is to aid in toppling the system that destroyed his family, and forever changed his outlook on the world. Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

Customer Reviews

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  • Ratings: 1Reviews: 1

Catch a Fireby Anonymous

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February 01, 2007: CATCH A FIRE is a very entertaining and instructive film about the 1980s South African problem with Apartheid - a time when the minority white population had political control over the far larger populace of blacks. It is based on a true story of one Patrick Chamusso, a fine working man not affiliated with the growing number of terrorists fighting to unite the black citizens to overthrow the Boers who is driven to alter his life to join the militant party of the African National Congress when he has personal experiences of abuse by the controlling whites. Patrick Chamusso (a fine Derek Luke) supports his wife Precious (Bonnie Mbuli Henna) and two daughters as a foreman at the oil plant. Though the plant is under investigation for terroristacts Chamusso remains adamantely a pacificist. Yet when the conflicted Boer policeman Nic Vos (Tim Robbins) begins to bear down on Chamusso as suspect in a fire explosion at his plant, Chamusso's alibi conceals the fact that while away coaching the plant's boys' soccer team he steals away to see his illegitimate son and ex-girlfriend and this bit of secrecy to protect his wife's feelings causes the explosion with Vos that confines him to jail. Chamusso joins the military branch of the ANC, trains with them, is captured, abused, imprisoned and finally released with the rise of Nelson Mandela. How all of the progress of the story takes place is the pleasure of the fine script by Shawn Slovo and the direction of Phillip Noyce (The Quiet American, Rabbit-Proof Fence, The Bone Collector, Clear and Present Danger, Patriot Games etc) who knows how to move these movies along. The cast is excellent, the sense of place (the film was filmed entirely on location) and the production aspects are all superb. The only problem with the film is the 'sell-out' at the end when suddenly we are watching bits and pieces of filmed history and voice over content that seems to diminish the emotional impact of the film. Still, for another opportunity to understand Apartheid and the great country of South Africa, this film is very much worth watching. And Derek Luke, Bonnie Henna and Tim Robbins offer excellent acting skills. Grady Harp