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Afrikaans crime writer’s terrifying thriller adapted for the big screen

‘Die Ontwaking’ is based on the book ‘Abel se Ontwaking’ by Chris Karsten.

MBOMBELA – Die Ontwaking (‘The Awakening’), a grisly, action-packed thriller that investigates the mind and motivations of an acutely intelligent serial killer, will open in selected cinemas around the country on 26 February 2016.

The film is the directorial debut of acclaimed production designer Johnny Breedt (‘Paljas’, ‘Hotel Rwanda’, ‘A Long Walk to Freedom’), and has been hailed as a game-changer for South African film.

It is based on the first book of the ‘Abel’ trilogy, ‘Abel se Ontwaking’ (translated into English as ‘The Skin Collector’), by well-known crime writer Chris Karsten.

In the movie, Abel Lotz (Gys de Villiers), the owner of a small art gallery specialising in African masks and artefacts, is also a curator of a different kind: he has an assortment of tattoos which he harvests from the bodies of his beautiful young victims for a collection that forms part of his ‘cosmic journals, a bizarre project in which he retells the story of the cosmos.

Juanita de Villiers Die Ontwaking
Juanita de Villiers in Die Ontwaking.

 

Ella Nesser (Juanita de Villiers) is the attractive, but inexperienced police detective in charge of the case. Her task is to track down the serial killer before yet another young woman is murdered.

She is in a long-term relationship with Bam (Armand Aucamp), and while she works hard to prove herself to her more senior colleagues Fred Lange (Gerard Rudolf) and Silas Sauls (Paul Eilers), she also has to deal with personal issues.

Paul Eilers in Die Ontwaking.
Paul Eilers in Die Ontwaking.

“A few years ago I decided I wanted to direct a film in Afrikaans and I popped into a book store to look for inspiration,” says Breedt.

“That’s when I came across Chris Karsten’s ‘Abel se Ontwaking’. I read it on a flight to the USA and I could not put it down. I just knew that it could be turned into a fantastic film.

“The thriller genre is much darker than what I had in mind for my first feature film, but that was also what attracted me to the project.

“I wanted to challenge myself as a scriptwriter and director and this was the perfect vehicle. I was determined to take the audience with me into places that make people feel uncomfortable.”

The film has been selected to screen on the opening night of Eden Independent Film Festival in George, which runs from October 30 to November 1.

It will also play on the closing night of the South African Horror Fest in Cape Town on November 6.

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