Dear Sis Dolly: A Modern Look at a Timeless Icon

Review

05/07/2026
In English, she is known as an “agony aunt.” In Afrikaans, as a confidante or comfort-giving aunt. In South Africa’s oldest family magazine aimed at Black South Africans, Drum Magazine, she was known as “Sis Dolly.” And with Drum celebrating its 75th anniversary this year, the Sis Dolly column is also blowing out its candles. I must confess from the outset that I was genuinely disappointed when I realised that the film, Dear Sis Dolly, was not a period piece. I had prepared myself for jazz, Sophiatown, and the iconic hairstyles and fashions of the 1950s. After all, Drum was founded in 1951, and the Sis Dolly column made its debut shortly thereafter. Since the newsroom at the time consisted mostly of men, they named the column after the famous actress Dolly Radebe, who appeared on the magazine’s cover in a swimsuit in July 1955.

According to Dear Sis Dolly director Twiggy Matiwana, the filmmakers decided to set the movie in the present day and explore the role Sis Dolly still plays in South Africans’ lives today. The story focuses on a psychologist, Khetiwe (Didintle Khunou), who runs her own community counselling centre in Meadowlands, Soweto. However, keeping a community project like this financially afloat is no easy task, and a few donation tins will not get you very far. Then Khetiwe learns that Drum magazine is looking for a counsellor to become the new Sis Dolly, and she hopes it will give her the opportunity to use the platform to save her beloved centre. But you cannot simply walk into the Drum newsroom and become the new Sis Dolly…

The screenplay reflects sharp wit and humour, and I found myself laughing out loud at several of the clever one-liners. The film’s dialogue is mostly in English, which not only reflects the urban setting in which the story takes place, but also suggests that the filmmakers hope to attract a broader audience.

Johannesburg is filmed and lit so charmingly that even New York’s skyline cannot hold a candle to it. Every frame looks like a colourful page from a glossy magazine and, as the well-worn expression goes, it is truly a feast for the eyes. That is why it is such a shame that the film’s soundtrack detracts from this achievement. There were several scenes in which the actors delivered excellent performances, only for the loud—and often overpowering—music to completely distract me from them.

In terms of acting, I must single out Abigail Kubeka and S’thandiwe Kgoroge. Kubeka, who made her screen debut in the local films Knock-Out (1969) and Joe Bullet (1973), plays the role of Khetiwe’s grandmother with the gravitas befitting such a veteran performer. Kgoroge, meanwhile, proves to Miranda Priestly of The Devil Wears Prada fame that South African magazine editors need not shy away from comparison with their overseas counterparts.

Dear Sis Dolly is enjoyable, light entertainment, yet the filmmakers do not shy away from tackling underlying themes such as complex family relationships and cyberbullying. The film asks: “Do we not all, like Khetiwe, have too many irons in the fire and simply wish to make others proud?” It is unfortunate that a romantic subplot is shoehorned into the story. It feels unnecessary in a narrative that is really about a woman finding her voice.

In a period when South African films have been scarce at the box office, I am willing to overlook this element. In the very year that Huisgenoot bids farewell to its own advice columnist, ‘Ask Irma,’ many of us still long for the nostalgia of days gone by. Have many of us not secretly peeked at the advice of similar aunties? Perhaps, in future, we will have to turn to Sis Dolly ourselves…

Production Information

Running Time

90 min

Writer and Director

Makganwana Mokgalong | Twiggy Matiwana

Screens

s

Age Restriction

13 L⁩

Cast

Didintle Khunou, Abigail Kubeka, S’thandiwe Kgoroge and Jerry Mofokeng-Makhetha

Rating

3/5

Box Office

See NFVF

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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