Trailer
On 19 July 1965, the South-African poet Ingrid Jonker walked into the sea near Drieankerbaai in Cape Town at the age of 31. She left behind a little daughter and an oeuvre of three laurelled collections of poems. Jonker's work fell into oblivion, until on 25 May 1994 president Nelson Mandela opened the very first session of the first democratically elected parliament of South Africa with Jonker's poem Die kind wat dood geskiet is deur soldate by Nyanga, a poem from 1960 that refers to the demonstrations near Sharpeville. Mandela chose the poem for good reason; he called Jonker 'both an African and an Afrikaner'. A white person in South Africa cannot get a bigger compliment. In the documentary Korreltjie niks is my dood, director Saskia van Schaik reconstructs the poet's eventful life, making her powerful poetry with its South-African rhythm tell part of the story. (filmcommission.nl)
0.00
Documentary
2001
0h 54m
Notifications
Subscribe to notifications about new episodes
Comments
20Reviews
20John Doe
2025-05-01, 14:32This movie exceeded my expectations, especially the ending!
Reply
Quote
Emily Smith
2025-05-01, 15:21Great cinematography but the story felt a bit rushed.
Reply
Quote
Liam Johnson
2025-05-02, 09:10Loved the characters, they felt very real and relatable.
Reply
Quote
Sophia Lee
2025-05-02, 10:45Not my cup of tea. I got bored halfway through.
Reply
Quote
Noah Brown
2025-05-02, 13:00A decent watch, though I wouldn't call it groundbreaking.
Reply
Quote
Olivia Davis
2025-05-03, 11:37Incredible performance by the lead actor!
Reply
Quote
William Wilson
2025-05-03, 18:05It had potential but poor writing dragged it down.
Reply
Quote