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Four Corners

Play trailer Poster for Four Corners 2013 1h 54m Crime Drama Play Trailer Watchlist
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70% Tomatometer 10 Reviews 67% Popcornmeter 50+ Ratings
Gangs in South Africa threaten a young boy.

Critics Reviews

View All (10) Critics Reviews
Carlos Aguilar indieWire Director Ian Gabriel manages to imbue the genre with genuine freshness while maintaining thematic elements unique to his national sensitivities. Jul 12, 2018 Full Review Jordan Mintzer The Hollywood Reporter An intense if somewhat overwrought foray into South African street violence. Jul 12, 2018 Full Review Leslie Felperin Guardian Gabriel has mastered the street-style rulebook as written by films such as City of God and Amores Perros, and has transposed the tricks effectively to this relatively little-seen setting, but he doesn't have much new to add to the mix. Rated: 3/5 Jun 4, 2015 Full Review Charles Mudede The Stranger (Seattle, WA) Each character is defined by a distinct narrative drawn from Hollywood cinema...the languages, gestures, manners, thinking, and appearance of the characters are clearly South African, but they are in narrative modes that are clearly American. Sep 26, 2018 Full Review Ben Nicholson CineVue Revelations thus never pack the punch they should and the endgame lacks the electricity that the performances might have generated. Rated: 2/5 Jul 12, 2018 Full Review Simon Kinnear Total Film This milieu deserves a City Of God; Gabriels slickly shot, well-meaning but facile attempt to explain an entire society's hardships feels closer to Paul Haggis Crash. Rated: 2/5 Jul 12, 2018 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

View All (7) audience reviews
Audience Member Good action, and there are area`s of Capetown you will never see, I know because i did ! Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/19/23 Full Review Audience Member An effective, unglamorous drama about the notorious Numbers gangs which hold much sway in many communities on the Cape Flats of Cape Town. The plot does seem to be a little aimless for a while, but it's bought together by the end even if the final twist of the story feels a little too much. The script is what lets the film down - it's too often too expositional of both content and plot, and pains to explain too much to outsiders. That's understandable, but it does mean that some of what comes out of the characters' mouths feels forced and unnatural, which sets it at odds with a film that is in many other respects immersed in local culture (especially the excellent soundtrack). There are some excellent directorial moments and some really powerful cinematography that manages to do more than the reams of expositional dialogue. In the end, it does feel authentic - I've met people for whom this context is their everyday reality, and these are the communities my children are originally from; it's clearly a film that knows its territory and is keen to do justice to the local stories without glamorising or sensationalizing such potent material. It just remains a shame that the script hampers it too much. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 02/07/23 Full Review Audience Member Exceptional representation of the Cape Flats .Strong cast who have moulded into their roles Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/27/23 Full Review Audience Member Plot Young Ricardo needs to choose a gang. Farakhan wants to leave prison and the gangs behind. Leila wants to settle her father's affairs and return to studying medicine in London. Gangster Gasant wants to avenge his little brother. A serial killer is looking for his next victim. Their lives will collide. Cast Good casting is half the battle won and Ian Gabriel made no mistakes when he chose the actors for their sheer talent and not their celebrity status of faux music careers. You will see many familiar faces, all the stalwarts of great acting. Pulling together the threads Four Corners starts off with four different stories being told. How the narratives are brought together, gently at first, is genius. Farakhan drags out a mattress on a roof and smokes a cigarette, while Leila pulls up outside her house in the other corner of the frame. Or, the relationship between Farakhan and Ricardo is merely hinted at through a faded newspaper photograph. It all leads to a crunching climax. Fathers The narratives of fathers, absent fathers, good fathers, or the promise of fatherhood that the gangs hold up to destitute, fatherless boys, is a narrative that should be told over and over in this country. Jaw-dropping scenes Really powerful films leave you with lingering scenes for years to come. If you haven't watched Japanese Story, and still aim to, skip this paragraph. Who will ever forget the scene where Toni Collette so desperately struggles to load that body of her lover into the back of the truck? Goosebumps. Four Corners had a few of those epic scenes. The red and blue bits of rope sticking out of the ground? Freaking awesome. Farakhan simply breaking Gasant's face, storming out of his house and taking on the neighbourhood, including his own gun-toting son? Jis. Audio The film has a sharp, crunching, popping soundtrack, with an overwhelming bass sound that puts you on the edge of your seat from the word go. Pistols being cocked, fists hitting bones, even engines revving, made me jump. It's not overdone, though. Your ears don't feel traumatised. Soundtrack Jis, we have some cool South African music. Especially the Afrikaans rap stands out. I'm talking about you, Hemelbesem. Editing A veggie garden is immediately followed by a crack house operation. A really loud, overwhelming scene flows into a little girl screaming into the waves on the beach. Spot-on editing. Surprise plot The "extra" plot of the serial killer was a bit of a surprise. It certainly added an extra element to an otherwise straightforward gangster movie. I'm not sure whether it was needed, though. Cinematography The colour grading, the composition, etc were good enough. The film was certainly strong enough to stand on its own without the help of incredible visuals. There were a few scenes where I wanted to tilt the camera, or move it a few degrees to the right or zoom out. Perhaps my background in photography has made me too critical of composition. The cool thing is, the standard for cinematography in South Africa is so high (thanks to Skoonheid, etc) that the director of photography now really has to spark to stand out. Collective versus the personal I loved the use of "the number". The two gangs, 26 and 28, obviously use numbers to identify members. Ricardo is pushed to choose a number, to join the collective, to become a brother, something that a young, fatherless, single child surely is drawn to. He grapples with that throughout the film. In a pivotal scene, Farakhan urges Ricardo to forget the number. To listen to him, Farakhan as an individual, and make his choice not for the collective, but for himself. "Vergeet die nommer." Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 01/31/23 Full Review Audience Member chess prodigy gets caught up in this tough to watch south African drama Rated 2 out of 5 stars 02/10/23 Full Review Audience Member Gritty and certainly relevant to modern day subcultures that have emerged in South Africa in recent times, but it's low-budget to the extent it feels like a television drama at times. Rated 2.5 out of 5 stars 02/06/23 Full Review Read all reviews
Four Corners

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Cast & Crew

Movie Info

Synopsis Gangs in South Africa threaten a young boy.
Director
Ian Gabriel
Producer
Cindy Gabriel, Genevieve Hofmeyr
Screenwriter
Hofmeyr Scholtz, Terence Hammond
Production Co
Giant Films, Moonlighting Films
Genre
Crime, Drama
Original Language
Afrikaans
Release Date (Streaming)
Feb 9, 2016
Runtime
1h 54m