Most Creatures Great and Small
by
“Good for the soul,” gushes one critic, and, depending on one’s reaction, that is the problem: Cape of Good Hope could be out of the popular feel-good book series and categorized as “Chicken Soup for the Soul,” that is, schmaltz.
Which is not to say it doesn’t have disarming charm, for those who like this sort of thing. An initial feature from 2001 transplants to the country, director/co-writer Mark Bamford and wife, Diahann Carroll’s daughter, co-writer Suzanne Kay, it takes the obvious but rare step of emphasizing the “Good Hope” of former Cape Province/Colony.
Unplanned, seven-week location shooting in coastal Hout Bay coincided with the diamond jewelry anniversary of the abolition of Apartheid, but photography and script consciously steer clear of temptation to travelogue and political obsession. Earlier works about and/or from the continent’s tip invariably gravitated to the complex tissue of race, politics, policy, and English vs. Afrikaner, as have contemporary Proteus, In My Country and Forgiveness. This one, as well, cannot one-hundred percent escape such defining problems, as when police as a matter of course accept a prosperous Boer’s word against that of a shantytown African domestic. But as with Botswana’s runaway successful The Gods Must Be Crazy -- which some saw as condescendingly racist -- the intent here lies not in that direction.
This film aspires to romantic comedy, in which, although some vainly deny it, everyone is looking for love. More, and in the same genre, there is no suspense whatsoever. Good guys and gals are immediately obvious, crust it over though they may, and will be appropriately rewarded, while the baddies get mild comeuppance in mud puddles. It’s been done a thousand times, and still people are drawn to this type of mush.
Altmanesque, many lives touch each other, fittingly in the workplace and church, at first casually and then intimately. In a Good Hope Animal Rescue Toyota, blonde pneumatic professional Good Samaritan Kate (stage actress Debbie Brown, in her film début) saves mutts, strays and waifs but overlooks hangdoggishly available boyish nice-guy widower and veterinarian Morne (Morne Visser), he who goes to Wednesday evening tango classes and whispers, “Rescue me.” Unconvincingly masking her heart with “I like him married, that’s his best feature,” she craves true affection but settles for cheap motel trysts and fast food with caddish married father-of-two Stephen van Heern (Nick Boraine). She blots out her own father who, she believes, when she was six left her and Zsa Zsa Gaborish mother Penny (Clare Marshall) for a snake charmer.
Receptionist at the animal shelter is loyal Sharifa (Quanita Adams), aching for children with her comically macho husband Habib (David Isaacs). Physically tending to the four-legged animals is Jean Claude (Eriq Ebouaney), a refugee from the Congo whose astronomy Ph.D. is not officially recognized but who moonlights as a planetarium volunteer -- and is let go -- and has applied for Canadian immigration papers. He also has his quiet eye on maid and cook Lindiwe (Nthati Moshesh), a single mother whose dog-loving son Thabo (Kamo Masilo) helps out at the shelter and needs a father, and whose Mama (Lillian Dube) is gruffly dismissive of immigrants and pushes the studious daughter towards marriage, especially with stiff, affluent Reverend Poswa (Yule Masiteng).
Unbelievable luck in an abandoned baby and a constabulary encounter help unclog the impasse that develops as the superficially touching lives begin to interweave more intricately. A late moment even includes forgiveness for a father sinned against rather than sinning, and, a year later, in happiness all can laugh at others’ foolishness. Bits of simpering awkwardness may (or may not) be the result of the simplistic quality of it all. This vein of up-with-people and –animals romp, however, is a traditional crowd-pleaser, meat-and-potatoes for the many.
(Released by Artistic License Films and rated "PG-13" for mature situations including some violence, sexual content and brief strong language.)