Movie Review: Invictus
By Jonathan Pattishall | December 13, 2009“Invictus” tells an incredible and entirely true story, that of the 1995 Rugby World Cup in South Africa. In that year Nelson Mandela (played in the movie by Morgan Freeman) used a white-dominated sport that had been a prominent symbol of apartheid to reconcile white and black South Africans. With the help of the Springbok’s captain Francois Pienaar (Matt Damon), he launched a PR campaign that brought the leftist agitators of the anti-apartheid African National Congress into the same sports tent as right-wing Afrikaners, most of whom were rugby fanatics. By championing the Springboks, Mandela convinced whites that he respected their culture, and in the process he helped unify a nation on the verge of race-based civil war.It is essentially a story about the charm, magnanimity and political geniusof Nelson Mandela. So even if some of the historical details were allowed to slip by the wayside (and they were), the only chance this movie stood of being a success was in hitting Mandela’s chord in perfect harmony. If director Clint Eastwood couldn’t do that, he should have scrapped the project altogether.Click above to read more