Home   In Cinemas   Showtimes   Box Office   Coming Soon   Top Rated Movies   Y! Star Reviewers   Browse Movies   Special Features   
Invictus (2010)
What's New Watch the trailer about a stone that grants kids wishes
Invictus
Release Date: 7th January 2010
Language: English
Running Time: 134 mins
 
Rating: PG
Genre: Drama
Starring: Morgan Freeman, Matt Damon
Directed by: Clint Eastwood
Local Distributor: Warner Bros
 
User Reviews: Read Review | Write Review
Users:
(25 ratings)
Sign in to rate this movie
Movie Plot Back to top

The film tells the inspiring story of how Nelson Mandela joined forces with the captain of South Africa's rugby team, Francois Pienaar, to help unite their country through universal language of sport. Mandela rallies South Africa's underdog rugby team as they make an unlikely run to the 1995 World Cup Championship.

SHAW

Showtimes for other movies
User's Review and Ratings Back to top

Knocking Out Apartheid with Rugby? One Word: WOW!

It still amazes me how Nelson Mandela used rugby as one 'ingredient' to destroy the apartheid in South Africa back in 1995. This film tells the amazing true story of how a man erased the racism that overtook the country for so long. I personally believe Invictus is probably one of the most inspiring and uplifting movie of 2009 (in USA, 2010 in some countries). It proves that anything can be resolved with something as small as, in this case, rugby. Morgan Freeman is charming as always, while Matt Damon adds up the spices to this film. And the rugby game scenes are so amazingly intense, you'll somehow cheer for the South African team when they're playing right in front of your eyes. This is one hell of a movie you guys have to watch yourselves, especially those who love rugby.

Story:

Acting:

Direction:

Visuals:

Overall:

Sign in to recommend this review. Report Abuse

Cinema Online's Review Back to top

Well, at least Morgan Freeman had an easier job doing Nelson Mandela than Forest Whitaker did for Idi Amin! While the latter had to put in a passionate (and very sweaty) portrayal of the Ugandan military dictator, the former needed only to get the accent and walk right, fleshing out an old man respected today as a great freedom fighter who effectively put an end to apartheid South Africa in the 90s. As sure as Patrick Stewart is a dead ringer for Professor X of the X-Men, Mr Freeman could scarcely find another role that just screams his name. Yes. "Invictus" (Latin, meaning "unconquered") may not have been a movie that needed to be made - but Freeman is definitely the man for the job.

Make no mistake, the feel-good factor is less prominent in this Clint Eastwood sports drama than say, a contemporary release like Sandra Bullock's "Blind Side", although both feature a similar sport and parallel racial themes. The movie focuses on the South African leader's manipulation of their (rugby union home team) Springbok's campaign and eventual unlikely victory in the 1995 Rugby World Cup, en route to uniting a nation that was divided in "balancing black ambition with white fears".

Again, the none-too-subtle sentiments we saw in "Gran Torino" resurface, for example, in the all-too-likely and simplistic "racial repair" scenes where a great deal rendering emotions seem to have been skipped just to get to that result. More importantly, there seems to be an underpinning stiffness to the performances, which extends even to Matt Damon's role as team captain Francoius Pienaar. While he definitely packed more muscle for this role, the corresponding gusto is rather stifled or at least delivered sparingly.

As such, "Invictus" leaves us as a reassured, solid effort complete with a prolonged climax and some real rugby action - but lacks a certain epic quality that would elevate its status to essential watching. However, where it lacks in power, it makes up with an easy-to-understand narrative that can be inspiring at times. Audiences will at least get another listen to the Afrikaans accent after "District 9" revisited it recently.