Carissa: A Puzzle Piece of Her Life
Review
The film Carissa (2025) offers us a glimpse into the everyday life of its main character, Carissa. She lives in the Western Cape village of Wuppertal, the same place where late filmmaker Jans Rautenbach’s 1969 film Katrina was shot. Rautenbach once recalled of that time: “We are in Wuppertal, far into the Cederberg where there is nothing on earth. We are in a time and an era that is long gone.” Almost twenty years after he said this, Carissa’s mobile phone is one of the few signs showing this film is not a period piece. Otherwise, everything still looks as though it could have taken place decades ago.
Carissa’s life is frugal, simple, even dull. She helps her grandmother Wilhelmien, with whom she lives, with household chores. In the evenings she hangs out at the pub to escape the monotony. When the developers of a large golf estate offer to train the village youth for work, Wilhelmien sees it as an opportunity for Carissa to escape to the city. Carissa herself shows little excitement. She stumbles on with her aimless daily routine until one day her estranged grandfather reappears. He wants to show her his rooibos tea plantations before signing the land away to the developers.
Production Information
Age Restriction
16
Cast
Gretchen Ramsden, Wilhelmiena Hesselman, Hendrik Kriel, Elton Landrew, Gladwin van Niekerk
Rating
4/5
Box Office
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Written by Anna-Marie Jansen van Vuuren
Professor Anna-Marie Jansen van Vuuren is a senior lecturer and research coordinator for the Film and Visual Communication, programme at the Faculty of Arts, at the Tshwane University of Technology. She specializes in research topics related to “identity” and “representation” in South African cinema—but in plain English: she loves movies, and she loves looking deeply at them.
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