The gods Must be crazy | |
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Directed by | Jamie Uys |
Written by | Jamie Uys |
Produced by | Jamie Uys |
Starring |
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Narrated by | Paddy O'Byrne |
Cinematography |
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Edited by |
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Music by | John Boshoff |
Production company | C.A.T. Films |
Distributed by | Ster-Kinekor |
Release date |
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Running time | 109 minutes |
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Languages |
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Budget | $5 million[1] |
Box office | R 1.8 billion (~$200 million)[2] |
The Gods Must Be Crazy is a 1980 comedy film written, produced, edited and directed by Jamie Uys. An international co-production of South Africa and Botswana, it is the first film in The Gods Must Be Crazy series. Set in Southern Africa, the film stars Namibian San farmer Nǃxau ǂToma as Xi, a hunter-gatherer of the Kalahari Desert whose tribe discovers a glass Coca-Cola bottle dropped from an aeroplane, and believe it to be a gift from their gods. When Xi sets out to return the bottle to the gods, his journey becomes intertwined with that of a biologist (Marius Weyers), a newly hired village school teacher (Sandra Prinsloo), and a band of guerrilla terrorists.
The Gods Must Be Crazy was released in South Africa on 10 September 1980 by Ster-Kinekor, and broke several box office records in the country, becoming the most financially successful South African film ever produced at the time.[2] The film was a commercial and critical success in most other countries, but took longer to find success in the United States, where it was eventually re-released in 1984 by 20th Century Fox,[1] with its original Afrikaans dialogue being dubbed into English. Despite its success, the film attracted criticism for its depiction of race and perceived ignorance of discrimination and apartheid in South Africa.[3]
In 1989, it was followed by a sequel The Gods Must Be Crazy II.
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was invoked but never defined (see the help page).