Boesman & Lena with Angela Bassett: DVD Cover

    Boesman & Lena Director: John Berry Cast: Angela Bassett, Danny Glover

    DVD - Pan & Scan / Wide Screen / Stereo Learn more

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    • DVD Release Date: 05/08/2001
    • Original Release: 2000
    • Rating: Not Rated
    • Sales Rank: 60,347

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    • Overview
    • Editorial Reviews
    • Scenes
    • Cast & Crew
    • Full Product Details

    Features

    Letterboxed (2.35:1) image; Dolby ProLogic; Pan-and-scan version; Interviews with Danny Glover, Angela Bassett, director John Berry, and writer Athol Fugard; Theatrical trailer; Cast and filmmaker bios

    Full Product Details

    Scene Index

    Side #1 -- Fullscreen
    0. Scene Selection
    1. Opening Titles [7:05]
    2. Here [11:31]
    3. Who Am I? [4:11]
    4. Stray Man [11:37]
    5. Behide Boesman's Back [4:53]
    6. Without Welcome [5:37]
    7. Nightfall [5:18]
    8. Freedom [10:31]
    9. A Reason to Hurt [5:34]
    10. Departure [9:04]
    11. Lena's Stand [3:57]
    12. A Better Day [8:13]
    1. Opening Titles [6:47]
    2. Here [11:04]
    3. Who Am I? [4:00]
    4. Stray Man [11:08]
    5. Behide Boesman's Back [4:42]
    6. Without Welcome [5:23]
    7. Nightfall [5:04]
    8. Freedom [10:00]
    9. A Reason to Hurt [5:26]
    10. Departure [8:43]
    11. Lena's Stand [3:47]
    12. A Better Day [7:52]

    Scene Index

    Editorial Reviews

    Angela Bassett and Danny Glover star in this gripping film adaptation of Athol Fugard's renowned play. Though written during the apex of apartheid and first staged in 1970, director John Berry downplays the work's historical background and strips the play of its poetic symbolism, lending the film a raw, universal quality. The film opens with stock footage of shantytowns being flattened by bulldozers followed by the two titular characters carrying what they can on their backs and heads. Recalling the tortured human bonds seen in such productions as Who's Afraid of Virgina Woolf? and Waiting for Godot, Boesman (Glover) and Lena (Bassett) are a couple united by pain and grief. Stopping at some god-forsaken roadside wasteland for the night, Lena spends much of the first half of the film heaping verbal abuse on her husband, while Boesman doggedly tries to jerry-rig some shelter to protect against the cold of the night. This dynamic changes went an elderly African tribesman shows up. Boesman scorns the old man, while Lena invites him to sit at their campfire. This film, which was screened at the 2000 Cannes Film Festival, was the last film that noted director John Berry made before his death on November 29, 1999. Jonathan Crow, All Movie Guide

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