Showing posts with label Jaco Bouwer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jaco Bouwer. Show all posts

Monday, January 27, 2025

Niggies set for March and filmed by Wolflight Films is kykNET's first drama series based on a true-crime double murder


by Thinus Ferreira

M-Net has commissioned and filmed a new Afrikaans drama series, Niggies, for kykNET (DStv 144), which is kykNET's first-ever drama series based on true-crime murders in South Africa.

Niggies will start on kykNET in March. 

Produced by Wolflight Films with Jaco Bouwer as director, the 9-episode Niggies started filming in October 2024 and wrapped on 7 December, with principal photography that took place around Cape Town.

Niggies is based on the double murders in 1965 of Issie Fourie and Petro Nel in the Free State province town of Odendaalsrus who were both abducted and murdered.

Issie's brother, André decided to bring the perpetrator to justice - something that took 18 years.

Niggies stars Beer Adriaanse as the older André, with Janru Steenkamp as the younger André, alongside Carel Nel.

Niggies starts with the double abduction and murder of Issie Fourie and Petro Nel in Odendaalsrus in 1965 and stretches across the 1960s and 1980s. The story is set in Odendaalsrus, Allanridge and Kroonstad in the northeastern Free State. 

Niggies has Roelof Storm as executive producer with Saartjie Botha and Philip Rademeyer who penned the script.

Jaco Bouwer says "While the abduction and murders made headlines at the time, the details of the story have been forgotten by all but those directly affected by the trauma".

"We didn't want to open old wounds but rather explore what really happened, with some dramatic license, and examine it in the context of modern South Africa where these events are more common than they were 60 years ago."

Waldimar Pelser, M-Net director of premium channels, says "Niggies is a raw exploration of loss and how unresolved trauma can destroy families".

"It is not a sensational story about violence - rather, it is a sensitive examination of how pain can be managed, and healing found in a place where hope is not supposed to exist."

Tuesday, August 29, 2023

The Hollywood Reporter republished a Showmax press release and a trailer for its upcoming Spinners drama series ' exclusively' - only, everyone got it.


by Thinus Ferreira

The behind-the-hand sniggering among South African journalists are ongoing over the bizarre PR approach of MultiChoice's Showmax with American outlets, this time over Showmax getting The Hollywood Reporter's Georg Szalai to republish what is a Showmax press release for its upcoming Spinners drama series as an "exclusive" together with a Spinners trailer branded an "exclusive trailer".

The hilarity? The Showmax press release is a general press release sent to media, and the trailer ... well, how is any trailer from any TV series ever "exclusive"?

The weeks before The Hollywood Reporter, MultiChoice's streaming service played with Deadline again who then had the "exclusive" trailer for Showmax's upcoming Outlaws drama series. 

Only, again, the information and trailer were anything but "exclusive" and are general production information - and a trailer! - that can and will never be something exclusive!

It's unclear what Showmax's thinking is its the odd PR approach but possibly American outlets don't or won't run press releases unless it's sold as something "exclusive"? 

Part of the broader ongoing issue as well is that MultiChoice and Showmax continue to do lip service saying they support the local biz ... however, that just doesn't really extend to the local news media. 

Constantly running to the likes of The Hollywood Reporter, Deadline and others because they are American, divvying up so-called fake "exclusives" hoping someone bites, after then doing an email blast with the same press release that then goes to local outlets in South Africa or Kenya or wherever, seems demeaning, destructive and counter-productive to building actual media relationships.

Spinners, a co-production with Canal+ of 8 episodes starring Cantona James and Chelsea Thomas with director Jaco Bouwer, will release the first episode on Showmax on 8 November.


Wednesday, August 10, 2022

Canal+ and Showmax behind the wheel for 8-episode Cape Town co-production car racing drama series Spinners.


by Thinus Ferreira

Canal+ and MultiChoice have teamed to film yet another co-production in South Africa, this time an action drama series called Spinners going inside the dangerous world of car spinning in Cape Town with the 8-episode series which will be on MultiChoice's video streaming service Showmax.

In March, speaking as a panellist at kykNET's 10th Silwerskermfees film festival in Camps Bay, Allan Sperling, MultiChoice Group's executive head of physical production, hinted that "an Afrikaans co-production has been signed and we're going into production within the next few months".

"It is possible to do Afrikaans international co-productions. We're in partnership with Canal+ who are taking the French rights and the rest of the world will be up for sales and this is where we're looking to recoup and the producer also gets proceeds from that. So it is also possible for Afrikaans shows to become co-productions," he said a few months ago.

Production on Spinners, which is the show that Allan Sperling referenced, is produced by Empreinte Digitale and Natives at Large with Jaco Bouwer as director and Benjamin Hoffman as co-creator and showrunner.

Filming on Spinners started in the Mother City this week, with the story revolving around Ethan, a 17-year old driver working for a local gang who discovers car spinning in which he excels and where he puts his driving skills to use.

Under the shadow of a looming gang war and with his gang being run by gangster Damien with an iron fist, Ethan tries to support his younger brother while he is increasingly disgusted with his own life, and tries to use car spinning as his exit from gang life.

The cast of Spinners include Cantona James and Chelsea Thomas from the Cape Town based Afrikaans telenovela Arendsvlei on kykNET & Kie (DStv 145), as well as Brendon Daniels and Dillon Windvogel, with the series which will be in English, Afrikaans and Kaaps Afrikaans.

The hip hop star DJ Ready D is the Spinners music supervisor and responsible for composing the show's soundtrack.

Meanwhile post-production is still continuing on Blood Psalms from Jahmil X.T. Qubeka and Layla Swart Najaar's Yellowbone Entertainment, with the African fantasy drama series which is another MultiChoice and Canal+ co-production earmarked for Showmax.


Sunday, April 7, 2019

TV CRITIC's NOTEBOOK. Stark contrast: Like HBO's Game of Thrones this past week, kykNET had a screening of its upcoming supernatural Afrikaans series, Die Spreeus. How they included and excluded the media couldn't be more different.


This past week M-Net's Afrikaans channel kykNET (DStv 144) had a "screening" of its upcoming new supernatural horror Afrikaans drama series Die Spreeus (The Starlings) starting on MultiChoice's DStv satellite service.

Unfortunately (and quite unprofessionally), kykNET apparently couldn't bother to tell the press - who are presumably kykNET stakeholders - that it would be happening beforehand, or send a physical or digital screener.

Nor did kykNET bother with any effort afterwards to issue information about it, what happened, or what was said at Die Spreeus screening. There were no photos, and likewise no information afterwards to those who attended, or any information sent to those who were not invited and not told that it would be taking place.

So now what? Everybody sitting back and waiting for the avalanche of coverage of the Marche Media produced series with director Jaco Bouwer? For the effusive praise? The photo stories? The profile interviews, or the set visit and on-location articles from when media visited the Cape Town filmed show while it was in production?

Naturally, none of that will happen.

kykNET's decrepit effort around Die Spreeus ironically comes in the same week that HBO held a red carpet event and preview screening for the press in New York of the upcoming 8th and final season of Game of Thrones that will start on 15 April on M-Net (DStv 101).

Compared to kykNET's dismal non-communication with Die Spreeus, the South African media covering television half a world away, ironically knew in advance that HBO would do a screening of Game of Thrones on Thursday evening at Radio City music hall. HBO communicated it.

In contrast, in South Africa, this TV critic and other journalists had to - by chance - notice a tweet on social media afterwards from the actress Monique Rockman who appear in Die Spreeus, that there was a media screening for the show that is not just coming to kykNET but also MultiChoice's subscription video-on-demand service Showmax (who knew?).

Of course it wasn't possible for South African press to actually see Game of Thrones, but the amount of information and even high-resolution red carpet and event photos shared immediately afterwards by HBO with the media - although on the other side of the world - pales in comparison with kykNET's "do nothing, can't care less" approach with Die Spreeus.

No. It's not necessary for kykNET to be like HBO, and neither I nor other scribes covering television have any expectation that kykNET should be as responsive or as pro-active as an American pay-TV channel with a global show like Game of Thrones.

Yet kykNET is not doing even the bare basics for a drama series that it invested in and paid money for and to bring it properly under potential viewers attention. For that there is no excuse.

Surely kykNET can and should be doing much, much better in working with and involving the South African press when it comes to rolling out, promoting and publicising its content.

Obviously, kykNET's approach of doing less rather than more when it comes to promoting its new programming under the South African media - apparently sublimely content with operating in a self-made bubble world of its own making - is working for it. That's the reason why M-Net's Afrikaans division keeps doing it (which is to say, not much).

It's a strategy that's unfathomable.

What exactly is the coverage that kykNET now expects for Marche Media's Die Spreeus? And what exactly did kykNET do in engaging and helping the media to achieve that?

A worrying concern is that several international TV channels, video streaming services and global broadcasters that are active and nowadays producing shows in South Africa are way more responsive and dynamic with their communication and PR with the local press covering television.

The past few months I and other journalists have done several set visits to international TV shows filming in Cape Town, that would include round-table interviews with their casts.

When these shows are ready for broadcast on some of the channels on MultiChoice's DStv and elsewhere, these channels and broadcasters again invite the press to a screening of the shows or send digital screeners.

It's something that simply doesn't happen, or happens haphazardly with local shows (that could do with and deserve attention).

It highlights the lack of an actual consistent PR policy at channels like kykNET as to how it involves the media to help in marketing and publicity efforts for its content.

During the same period, one show filming in Cape Town for a local singing reality series invited media to come watch during recording. The difference couldn't be more stark.

South African TV channels and their shows are quietly, yet massively, being leapfrogged in their own country in "best practice publicity".

It's happening because they neither care, nor know, nor ask, nor upskill themselves in terms of what others are doing.

They don't know and don't care to find out how their competitors are engaging and communicating with the media in a much better, much more consistent way.

The big loser here isn't the press - there are tens of shows now starting daily all begging for attention and coverage. There are more shows to write and talk about and feature than what can be adequately covered by any journalist or media outlet.

Journalists now simply move on and work with TV channels and shows who reach out to them, or where information is readily available.

Sadly those suffering are the public, viewers and potential viewers of kykNET and a show like Die Spreeus. It negatively affects the people not knowing about it, not knowing that it's on, not knowing when it's starting, or not getting more stories about a series they might be interested in.

When something like the process of "content discovery" for what is actually on MultiChoice's DStv and StarSat and Netflix South Africa, Showmax, Amazon Prime Video,Viu and the raft of other services have become more and more cumbersome and more difficult than ever before, kykNET and local TV channels in South Africa need to start to step up and do more - not marinade in doing nothing and less.

Viewers might not know it, and a lot of people don't care, but the lack of coverage about locally produced South African TV shows like kykNET's Die Spreeus is often a horror story not of the media's making but caused by the inaction and subpar efforts of the very TV channels that commissioned these series in the first place, and that these shows are then on.