by Oliver Hermanus
South Africa, 1981: In order to defend the apartheid regime from communism and the ‘black danger’, white men from the age of 16 are drafted into the military. From one day to the next, the highly sensitive Nicholas finds himself at a tough training camp, along with other young men, where they are pushed to their physical and psychological limits. Moments of cautious affection are scattered between sweat, blood and testosterone, but there is no room for so-called ‘moffies’ in this homophobic and racist environment. Nicholas is forced to suppress his sexuality and his emotional world. In raw, aesthetic images, MOFFIE tells the story of the bias and powerlessness of young men who had to fight for a misanthropic ideology.