Duma | BoomerangShop.com - Thailand Online Blu-Ray, DVD, CD Store

Browse

Newsletter

Keep up-to-date with new releases and great offers

Duma

Format: DVD (1)
UPC: 0085393898328
Product Status
Shipping & Pickup
Checking stock...
  • SRP (Baht) : 880.00
  • Our Price (Baht) : 629.00
Click to see shopping cart
details or checkout.
  • Release Date : 16/05/2006
  • Distributor : Import
  • Genres : Family
  • Aspect Ratio : 1.33:1
  • Language : ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.1 [CC]
  • Subtitles : English, French, Spanish
  • Number of discs : 1
  • Package : Keep Case
  • Rated : PG
  • Credits
    • Actors : Alex Michaeletos, Campbell Scott, Mary Makhatho, Nthabiseng Kenoshi, Hope Davis, Eamonn Walker, Alexander Michaletos
    • Directors : Carroll Ballard
    • Studio : Warner Home Video
    • Run Time : 100 mins
    • Synopsis :
      This African tale follow the rhythms of director Carroll Ballard's earlier films The Black Stallion and Fly Away Home; namely a child is drawn into the mysteries and magic of an animal. Xan (newcomer Alexander Michaletos) is a 12-year-old living in South Africa with his parents (Campbell Scott and Hope Davis; who appeared as a much different couple three years earlier in The Secret Life of Dentists) when they find an abandoned baby cheetah. They bring it up as their own and name it the Swahili word for cheetah; Duma. After some time; the creature is too big to stay domesticated and Dad tells the boy they will have to journey back to Duma's home to set him free. A sickness makes the family pull up stakes and head to the city where Xan and Duma don't fare well. Xan must take Duma on his own to set him free. To tell more would be a crime. As with any Ballard film; the story is subtext; the visuals rule. First-time cinematographer Werner Maritz fills the screen with the desert landscape and is able to capture the magnificent speed of the cheetah. Ballard's films seem to build on their own inertia; creating scenes that seem to be simply happening instead of scripted; although this often suffers in the balance of wonderment versus all-too-lucky occurrences. Based on the children's picture book/memoir How It Was with Dooms by Xan and Carol Cawthra Hopcraft; this is a film worth seeking out; especially for families and kids above 5 years old. --Doug Thomas



Go to TOP