A white middle class South African suburbanite with no interest in politics agrees to help his black gardener find his jailed son. His investigation opens his eyes to the horrors committed by the secret police and turns him into a target.
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7.0 /10
6811 people rated
A Dry White Season
1989
R
1 h 46 m
United States
Drama
Thriller
A white middle class South African suburbanite with no interest in politics agrees to help his black gardener find his jailed son. His investigation opens his eyes to the horrors committed by the secret police and turns him into a target.
More
7.0 /10
6811 people rated
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Top Cast(18)
Donald Sutherland
Ben
Janet Suzman
Susan
Zakes Mokae
Stanley
Jürgen Prochnow
Captain Stolz
Susan Sarandon
Melanie
Marlon Brando
McKenzie
Winston Ntshona
Gordon
Thoko Ntshinga
Emily
Leonard Maguire
Bruwer
Gerard Thoolen
Col. Viljoen
Susannah Harker
Suzette
Andrew Whaley
Chris
Rowen Elmes
Johan
Stella Dickin
Susan's Mother
David de Keyser
Susan's Father
John Kani
Julius
Sophie Mgcina
Margaret
Bekhithemba Mpofu
Jonathan
User Review
user903174192241
16/10/2023 04:39
Trailer—A Dry White Season
Isaac peeps
16/11/2022 13:28
A Dry White Season
Lungelo Mpangase
16/11/2022 04:13
Euzhan Palcy is a great director. She has broken many barriers for Black Female Filmmakers. Most of her work has been political with strong impact, as this film is. Never before have we seen such a story told through the eyes of a black woman and done so well that she received critical acclaim.
I have to disagree with Mr. Trevor Moses that this was an awful film. Also, Mr. Moses get your facts straight. The director of this film Ms. Palcy was not a racist hence the amazing cast. And one last thing these actors did this movie for almost nothing, including Robert Redford who did it for FREE, all because they saw her vision. FYI check out www.euzhanpalcy.com
Yaseen Nasr | ياسين
16/11/2022 04:13
The story tells of the terror and horror that abounded in segregated South Africa. The torture of the man servant mirrored that of what the Gestapo did to their victims during World War 2. I thought Donald Sutherland performed admirably, as did the entire supporting cast.
What one piece of dialogue remains with me was the sentence spoken by Marlon Brando when he identified the corrolation between the law and justice, brilliant!
Larrywheels
16/11/2022 04:13
Having just seen it on the TV again after a number of years it is a stark reminder of the terror imposed on the black population by the security apparatus of S. Africa during the years of Apartheid.
The part with Marlon Brando as the human rights lawyers is particularly good exposing the ludicrous nature of a system that is completely repressive while maintaining the fiction that it is not.
This film should be compulsory viewing in any educational course studying recent African history
A personal reminiscence:-
I was living in Zimbabwe from 87-89 and I remember when the film was being shot on location there. They were shooting the scene at the end when it is raining but it was during the dry season in Zimbabwe in the local news they recorded the fact that they'd had to make their own rain with lots of hoses etc.
— No more content —
User Review
user903174192241
16/10/2023 04:39
Trailer—A Dry White Season
Isaac peeps
16/11/2022 13:28
A Dry White Season
Lungelo Mpangase
16/11/2022 04:13
Euzhan Palcy is a great director. She has broken many barriers for Black Female Filmmakers. Most of her work has been political with strong impact, as this film is. Never before have we seen such a story told through the eyes of a black woman and done so well that she received critical acclaim.
I have to disagree with Mr. Trevor Moses that this was an awful film. Also, Mr. Moses get your facts straight. The director of this film Ms. Palcy was not a racist hence the amazing cast. And one last thing these actors did this movie for almost nothing, including Robert Redford who did it for FREE, all because they saw her vision. FYI check out www.euzhanpalcy.com
Yaseen Nasr | ياسين
16/11/2022 04:13
The story tells of the terror and horror that abounded in segregated South Africa. The torture of the man servant mirrored that of what the Gestapo did to their victims during World War 2. I thought Donald Sutherland performed admirably, as did the entire supporting cast.
What one piece of dialogue remains with me was the sentence spoken by Marlon Brando when he identified the corrolation between the law and justice, brilliant!
Larrywheels
16/11/2022 04:13
Having just seen it on the TV again after a number of years it is a stark reminder of the terror imposed on the black population by the security apparatus of S. Africa during the years of Apartheid.
The part with Marlon Brando as the human rights lawyers is particularly good exposing the ludicrous nature of a system that is completely repressive while maintaining the fiction that it is not.
This film should be compulsory viewing in any educational course studying recent African history
A personal reminiscence:-
I was living in Zimbabwe from 87-89 and I remember when the film was being shot on location there. They were shooting the scene at the end when it is raining but it was during the dry season in Zimbabwe in the local news they recorded the fact that they'd had to make their own rain with lots of hoses etc.
— No more content —
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