My F*k Marelize! – “Sometimes there just isn’t enough space for a mother to also be human.”

Review

With these words, Heidi sums up her inner struggle when her daughters ask why she hid her cancer treatment from them.

The concept of My F*k, Marelize! originates from the hilarious video that once spread like wildfire on social media. Mom Heidi films her eighteen-year-old daughter Marelize learning to ride a bike. But when she crashes straight into the rugby posts, her mother’s voice perfectly captures the moment: “My F*k, Marelize!”

The film, penned and directed by Brett Michael Innes—known for works such as Sink (2015) and Fiela se Kind (2019)—takes this moment between mother and daughter and uses it to give a glimpse into the life of an ordinary Afrikaner family from Windhoek. A family who must learn that life, like cycling, requires you to keep pedaling. Sometimes it’s tough, other times you fall, but the secret is to get up again and push forward—with the help of those who love you.

Je-ani Swiegelaar plays the determined mother, Heidi Horn, who hides her battle with cancer from her two daughters, Marelize (Zandélle Meyer) and older sister Wilmari (Nichola Viviers), because she believes it’s her burden to carry. Heidi’s husband, Tinus (Neels Clasen), is her right hand. But when Marelize discovers her mother’s secret, the cat is out of the bag, and Heidi is confronted with a struggle even greater than her illness: the realization that she cannot walk this road alone—and, more importantly, that she doesn’t have to.

My F*k, Marelize! works as a simple story dealing with a complicated issue. The performances from all the actors are mostly solid, but it is ultimately Je-ani Swiegelaar’s portrayal of Heidi that lingers with you. Some scenes capture intimate moments beautifully without being bogged down by unnecessary dialogue, while others feel a bit forced, with writing that sometimes seems to stall for time.

My only criticism is that more could have been done with the setting. Namibia is not often used as a filming location in local cinema, and here was an opportunity to play more visually with the space.

The marketing and title of the film may appear slightly misleading. The original viral video of Marelize falling off her bike, accompanied by her mother’s exclamation, gives the impression of a slapstick comedy. The cancer storyline and how the Horn family stands together, however, lean more toward family drama. Thus, My F*k, Marelize! can best be described as a “dramedy”—sorrow through laughter.

If there is one reason to watch My F*k, Marelize!, it is for Je-ani’s performance as an ordinary mother trying to protect her daughters, only to discover that they also protect her when she needs it most.

Production Information

Running Time

82 min

Writer and Director

Brett Michael Innes | Zandré Coetzer

Screens

s

Age Restriction

PG 13 L

Cast

Je-ani Swiegelaar, Zandelle Meyer, Neels Clasen, Nichola Viviers

Rating

3/5

Box Office

See NFVF

Written by Gerhard Ehlers

Gerhard Ehlers is a film and television production lecturer at the Boston Media House campus in Sandton, Johannesburg. Gerhard has always seen himself as a storyteller, and already in high school, he wrote the scripts and directed three independent short films, namely: “Friendly Conscience”, “Die Heuningwyser” and “Sekelfontein”.

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