More candid camera pranks.More candid camera pranks.More candid camera pranks.
Photos
Tani de Lange
- Self - commercial director
- (uncredited)
Bill Flynn
- Self - actor at interview
- (uncredited)
Susan Gehr
- Woman conducting survey 2
- (uncredited)
Derrick Lotz
- Self - man on trampoline
- (uncredited)
Bo Petersen
- Ice cream saleslady
- (uncredited)
Daan Retief
- Russian tourist
- (uncredited)
Buster Reynolds
- Self
- (uncredited)
Leon Schuster
- 'Frenchman'
- (uncredited)
- …
Mike Schutte
- Self - man blocking escalator
- (uncredited)
Mary-Ann van Dekken
- Self
- (uncredited)
Gerda van den Broek
- Self
- (uncredited)
Arnold Vosloo
- Self - actor at interview
- (uncredited)
Annelisa Weiland
- Woman conducting survey
- (uncredited)
Ian Yule
- Self - actor at interview
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- ConnectionsFollows Funny People (1976)
Featured review
Candid Camera antics with a racist twist
I spent about three months travelling around South Africa in 2002 and watched a video of this on a Greyhound bus going from Kimberley to Cape Town. It was entertaining enough, and occasionally very funny, but what sticks in my mind is the way some of the black people who were victims of Jamie Uys' practical jokes were patronisingly presented as Stepin Fetchit-like morons.
A workman who thinks he has blown up a building, for instance, thinks he can undo the damage by turning a switch back to where it was. But if blacks were being given a sub-standard education, what did the whites expect? While I wouldn't expect old movies to be banned in the "new" South Africa, it felt weird to see this throwback to a less enlightened age being screened on public transport. (Oh, and on a lighter note, look out for a young Arnold Vosloo, later to find fame as The Mummy!)
A workman who thinks he has blown up a building, for instance, thinks he can undo the damage by turning a switch back to where it was. But if blacks were being given a sub-standard education, what did the whites expect? While I wouldn't expect old movies to be banned in the "new" South Africa, it felt weird to see this throwback to a less enlightened age being screened on public transport. (Oh, and on a lighter note, look out for a young Arnold Vosloo, later to find fame as The Mummy!)
helpful•712
- davidxryan
- May 22, 2003
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
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- Also known as
- Gente Gira 2
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
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