Everything about Duma Film totally explained
Duma is a
2005 drama/
adventure film,
directed by
Carroll Ballard. It stars
Hope Davis,
Campbell Scott, and
Eamonn Walker. The film is a fictional adaptation loosely based upon the autobiographical novel
How It Was With Dooms by Carol Cawthra Hopcraft and Xan Hopcraft. Mr. Xan Hopcraft is portrayed by
Alexander Michaeletos in the film.
Plot summary
Set in the country of
South Africa, Duma tells the powerful adventure tale of an unbreakable bond of friendship between an orphaned
cheetah named Duma and a courageous young boy named Xan (
Alexander Michaeletos). Xan faces the true test of love when he must cross the wilds of Southern Africa to return his best friend to his rightful home.
When Xan and his father Peter (
Campbell Scott) come across an orphaned cheetah cub, they name their new friend "Duma," the
Swahili name for cheetah, and he quickly becomes a member of the family. But when Duma is almost fully grown, to Xan's dismay, his father tells him that it's time to take his friend to his real home before he grows too old to survive in his native habitat. As Peter says, "Duma has to live the life he was born to - or he'll never be fully alive."
Xan reluctantly agrees, but their plans must be put on hold when his father suddenly falls ill and dies and Xan and his mother (
Hope Davis) must move to Johannesburg. When Duma escapes and pays a disastrous visit to Xan's school, the two of them must flee the city to keep Duma from being put into captivity.
Not knowing where to go, Xan gets an idea - he'll carry out the plan his dad had outlined, taking Duma home to a safe and lush place hundreds of miles across South Africa, over the scorching Makgadikgadi Salt Pans, through the
Okavango Delta and into the
Erongo Mountains.
Before long, Xan is piloting his dad's motorcycle with Duma riding shotgun in the sidecar, the wind whipping through his fur, as the two friends speed across the barren desert and into the wildest adventure of both their lives.
After running out of fuel and water, they seek the comfort of the only shade for miles, the shadow cast by the remains of an airplane wreck, where they're confronted by Ripkuna (
Eamonn Walker), a mysterious drifter on a journey of his own. While Xan isn't at all that sure he can trust Rip, he's to admit that he's going to need some help along the way...and Duma makes for a pretty menacing bodyguard.
With some engineering know-how and a parachute from the downed plane, the motorcycle is transformed into an ingenious
desert sailboat, and Xan, Rip and Duma are soon racing at breakneck speed across the scorched flats on the power of the wind, until they encounter the untraversable scrub brush of the
Kalahari Desert and must abandon their craft.
Rip is trapped in an abandoned diamond mine by a cave in, and Xan decides to leave him as he suspects that he's been leading him to town instead of the jungle. However, when Duma is caught in a trap and Xan is knocked unconscious by a boar, Rip rescues both of them.
Entering the lush jungles of the Okavango Delta, Xan finds himself surrounded by danger -
lions roaring in the distance,
crocodiles gliding beneath the furious rapids of the
Thamalakane River, and deadly poisonous creatures crawling through the foliage. But it's far too late to turn back now.
Drawing nearer to the Erongo Mountains where he and Duma must finally part, Xan knows that that'll face a final test, and discover if Duma is ready to live the life he was born to.
Tagline: Some friendships are wilder than others.
Relationship to the book
In both the book
How it Was With Dooms and the film, there was a Hopcraft family that lived in Africa with a pet cheetah named Duma. Most of the similarity ends there; the film is set in South Africa, whereas the real-life Hopcraft family lived in Kenya. In the film, Xan is a boy when they adopt Duma, whereas in the book, Duma is already a pet when Xan is born. The book was written after Duma died on the farm when Xan was twelve years old. The main thrust of the film - returning Duma to the wild - is fiction.
Trivia
- The insect swarm in the film was said to be made up of the Tsetse fly species. In fact, tsetse flies don't swarm.
- The disease the Tsetse flies pass on is the usually fatal Sleeping sickness. In the film, the symptoms were not of sleeping sickness.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Duma Film'.
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