Six days in the violent life of a young Johannesburg gang leader.Six days in the violent life of a young Johannesburg gang leader.Six days in the violent life of a young Johannesburg gang leader.
- Won 1 Oscar
- 23 wins & 18 nominations total
Israel Matseke-Zulu
- Mandla, Tsotsi's Father
- (as Israel Makoe)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaIn urban slang of Johannesburg "tsotsi" loosely translated means "thug".
- GoofsWhen Tsotsi enters the room of the kidnapped child, you can see (on the right hand side) that the wall paper is false.
- Alternate versionsA open matte version in 1.85 ratio was edited on the french DVD in 2006.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The 63rd Annual Golden Globe Awards 2006 (2006)
Featured review
Unforgettable
Tsotsi is gorgeous, riveting, poignant, and thrilling. Not only is it a first-rate piece of storytelling, but it also takes the viewer into a world of South African poverty and crime that he has never seen before. Director/writer Gavin Hood offers us a tale of tragic redemption and uncommon poetry in a subculture of the most abject immorality. Truly unforgettable.
The only work in recent times to which this movie can be compared is City of God. There, too, the viewer is brought into a world of poverty and crime he probably never knew existed. It is a world so bleak that it forces the viewer to examine his own morality and wonder how much of the civility he takes for granted in his life is merely the luxury of the well fed and comfortable. These characters live on the edge and their primary passion is survival.
What makes Tsotsi, in the end, a finer film than City of God is that it offers a more complex sense of hope; it reminds us in an honest and unsentimental way that inside even the hardest cases there is a soul, which is never beyond redemption
Tsotsi is gorgeous, riveting, poignant, and thrilling. Not only is it a first-rate piece of storytelling, but it also takes the viewer into a world of South African poverty and crime that he has never seen before. Director/writer Gavin Hood offers us a tale of tragic redemption and uncommon poetry in a subculture of the most abject immorality. Truly unforgettable.
The only work in recent times to which this movie can be compared is City of God. There, too, the viewer is brought into a world of poverty and crime he probably never knew existed. It is a world so bleak that it forces the viewer to examine his own morality and wonder how much of the civility he takes for granted in his life is merely the luxury of the well fed and comfortable. These characters live on the edge and their primary passion is survival.
What makes Tsotsi, in the end, a finer film than City of God is that it offers a more complex sense of hope; it reminds us in an honest and unsentimental way that inside even the hardest cases there is a soul, which is never beyond redemption
- How long is Tsotsi?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $3,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $2,912,606
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $76,324
- Feb 26, 2006
- Gross worldwide
- $9,891,303
- Runtime1 hour 34 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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