behind the scenes > director's statement

Director's statement

Introduction

THE MAN WHO STOLE MY MOTHER'S FACE is a deeply personal film in which I search for justice for my mother following a traumatic crime that occurred fourteen years ago.

On 23 December 1988, my mother was sexually assaulted and violently beaten in her home in Johannesburg, South Africa by a young white teenager and left for dead. She managed to crawl to her neighbour's house and survived the attack, but she suffered deep and lasting damage include the loss of her sense of self, her faith in humanity, and her will to live. Her face was so badly smashed that it had to be completely reconstructed, and for ten years she refused to look at herself in the mirror. After the attack, I brought her to Australia and she now lives on the outskirts of Lismore in Northern NSW. She was on a toxic brew of anti-depressants for eight years, and had locked herself away from the world, living the life of a suburban hermit.

Why I went back to South Africa

In early 2001, I proposed the idea to my mother of going back to Johannesburg to try and find the man who had attacked her and to seek some form of justice. My mother had identified her attacker from a school photograph after the assault but he was never charged with the crime. Whereas before the attack she was outgoing, highly creative, slightly eccentric and fascinated by human nature, she was now distrustful of individuals and society as a whole. Her view was "if you take away justice, you take away the fabric of society and even the meaning of life". She had become a hermit and was often severely depressed and suicidal.

At first my mother was dubious about the idea, but the very fact that I was talking to her about what had happened seemed to have a positive effect. The main problem was that she had little faith in the police and justice systems in South Africa. But South Africa had undergone enormous changes since Laura had left the country in September 1989. There was a new regime in place, and Nelson Mandela had inspired the country with a spirit of optimism, unity and forgiveness. I wondered how this new regime would view an unsolved crime from the past.

Raising development finance for the film

I successfully pitched the idea to the ABC at the Documentary Conference in Perth. We had just finished the highly successful film LOSING LAYLA and I think that helped create a climate of confidence that we could tell a personal story like this in the documentary form. We were able to secure development funding from the AFC and the NSW FTO and this made it possible to undertake a research trip to Johannesburg and to secure international interest in the project.

The first trip in 2001

The first trip back to Johannesburg was in June of 2001. I was accompanied by my partner and co-producer Jeff Canin and Vanessa Gorman, who was working with me at that stage as co-director. (Vanessa became pregnant some months later and withdrew from the project to focus on being a parent, but continued to be a script consultant). We went to the police station that had handled the case in 1989 and found that the investigating officer, Jan van der Mescht, had since retired from the police force and all documents relating to the case were missing. However, the head of the station Supt. John Miles rang van der Mescht while I was in his office and van der Mescht revealed that he remembered interviewing the suspect who admitted being in my mother’s house but denied the assault. I considered this a great break-through, as it was very clear to us that whoever was in my mother’s house that night had committed the crime. But when van der Mescht heard that I wanted to meet with him, he evaded me for five days and then denied remembering anything at all about the case. This was extremely frustrating, and I was feeling very despondent about it all when I met Charlene Smith. She told me that if I wanted justice, I would have to fight for it, and it would not be easy. But she also offered to provide significant contacts and assistance if I decided to return and continue the quest for justice.

Charlene's high profile in South Africa was of crucial importance during my second trip to Johannesburg in dealing with authorities in the police and judicial system. She has won numerous ‘Woman of the Year’ and ‘Person of the Year’ awards for her work as a campaigner for human rights particularly in relation to sexual violence and HIV. She has also won many journalism awards including the 2000 CNN African Journalist of the Year award, and is highly regarded by people in all levels of government and the justice system.

Raising international finance and interest in the film

After the first frustrating trip to Johannesburg, my partner Jeff and I went to a documentary market in Marseille to meet with our Montreal based distributor, Jan Rofekamp and other broadcasters to gauge the international interest in this story. There was considerable interest, including from HBO who had bought our previous film LOSING LAYLA. Back in Australia, we began the long and arduous process of putting together a deal for the Film Finance Corporation and raising the necessary finance and support for the film. I also went to MIP TV in Cannes in May 2002 and Hot Docs in Toronto to raise further international interest in the film. Finally we had the package together and went into production in September 2002. I returned to Johannesburg with Production Manager Aliison Kelly in late September and we hired a local crew consisting of DOP, sound recordist and driver/security person. Jeff joined us for 3 weeks in November and was present when I finally confronted the suspect.

The second trip to South Africa in 2002

The first thing I did on this second trip was to contact Charlene Smith again who introduced me to the head of the new Sexual Offences Unit based in Johannesburg, and he agreed to re-open the case. He assigned the investigation to Capt. Arnold Boonstra. I obtained permission from the police to film the investigation and began spending time with Arnold and his off-sider Ferdi. The rest of the story is in the film.

Not a film about South Africa

Although the story plays out largely in Johannesburg, this is not a film about South Africa. This crime could have taken place in any country, and the young, white teenager who carried out the assault could live anywhere. South Africa lends a unique quality to the circumstances, but it is a universal story about the aftermath of trauma and the need for some form of justice.

Laura appearing in the film

At first my mother did not want to appear in the film, but as time progressed, she began to see the value in telling her story and the greater impact her presence would have in the film. She began to feel that perhaps, finally, some good may come of this terrible trauma. By the end she was completely willing to expose every aspect of her story and to show the real depths of the despair she had reached in its aftermath. She also surprised herself by finding that she could still play the piano, something she had not done since the assault, and that other aspects of her creative life were returning. She joined the University of the Third Age, made new friends, including male friends, and began an exercise and weight loss program. She is now enjoying being back in the world and renewing her faith in human nature.

Family archive material

Laura’s first person narrative was constructed from interviews and a narrative which we wrote together to accompany a mixture of archive footage and re-creation images. When I went to Johannesburg in early 1989 following the attack, I took a Video 8 camera which I had recently acquired. My film-making career was just beginning, and I was experimenting by filming everything around me. This footage became a valuable source of archive material in reconstructing the events of 1988/89. My brother had also been experimenting with the new domestic cameras and he filmed Laura with the iron cage on her face after the attack. My father had been a well-known film-maker in South Africa and I had access to a short home-movie he shot on Super 8 film while he and my mother were on their honeymoon in 1952.

My first person narration

The main body of the film is the quest for justice and the police investigation. I realised very early in the development stage that I would need to be in the film and to use a first person narration. I began writing the narration script during the second visit to Johannesburg and wrote a complete script of the film before I began editing. The narration script changed considerably during the post-production stage, but the structure of the film remained essentially as I had written it. I had experienced an enormous amount of anxiety and tension during my three month stay in Johannesburg and I wanted to capture some of this tension in the film. I knew that what I was proposing was dangerous and the outcome was completely unpredictable, and I wanted the feeling of that to be in the finished film. I also confronted a complex web of legal and ethical issues along the way and included some of this process in the film. I knew that however it played out, I was searching for some form of closure so that the effects of what happened that night could finally begin to heal.

Story-telling elements

It was my intention all along to make this story accessible to the widest possible audience, and I therefore decided on a strong narrative structure and looked deliberately for the suspense as well as the quirky and unexpected elements in the telling of the story. I wanted the film to be uplifting and empowering and not a depressing experience for the audience. I also focussed on a wide range of community reactions to this crime, particularly the response of men. My brother became a major character, as I realised that so often in the case of sexual assault, men are at a loss as to how to respond and what they can do to help. The response of Laura’s neighbours and community raised the very important issue of blame, and I was very fortunate that Cecily was willing to co-operate and that she so quickly understood the importance of acknowledgement and apology. This issue was a lot more complex with my brother, but he finally accepted that other men may relate to his predicament and that what I was doing with the film would be helpful to his relationship with his mother.

The need for some form of justice

Some people have asked, why do this after fourteen years? My mother has answered the question well: "People don't forget when traumatic events hit their lives. There are still people looking for resolution to atrocities that occurred during the Second World War 60 years ago. These experiences and the impact they have on our lives don't have a 'use-by' date". I believe there is a fundamental need in all humans to believe in some form of justice, be it legal, moral or spiritual. I went in search of and found a form of justice for my mother and in the process reaffirmed my faith in the fundamental decency of human nature.

The film’s style and portrayal of Johannesburg

The backdrop of the film was the city of Johannesburg where I grew up. It was captured in a refreshing way by one of South Africa's top DOPs, Ian Miller. We decided to use the many large billboards in and around the city to portray some of the new and complex spirit of the city.

So often Johannesburg is depicted only as a city of barbed wire and high security fences with people cowering in fear behind the overwhelming crime rate. I wanted to show a different side to the place, but I could not ignore the facts. Johannesburg is widely regarded as one of the most violent cities in the world and sexual assault has reached epidemic proportions. Conservative reports estimate that a woman is raped there every 26 seconds.

However, what I saw on the second trip was a city emerging from this strangle-hold of fear and violence. Rather than just hiding behind their high walls, increasingly people were facing the problems head-on and rejoicing in a new spirit of hope and optimism about the future. It was like looking at the city after a fire. Instead of just seeing the charred remains, I was able to see the small green buds of new growth emerging everywhere. There are undoubtedly enormous problems in South Africa, particularly the overwhelming AIDS epidemic and the unacceptable levels of crime and sexual assault. But everywhere people are working to combat and alleviate the problems with an infectious combination of hope and faith. Some of this rises from the legacy of ex-president Nelson Mandela who still maintains a powerful presence in the country. It is also supported by the knowledge that grass roots organisations and mass protests help defeat the atrocities of the apartheid system and remove the old regime. They believe they can confront the present problems with the same determination and win. Music, theatre and mass protest actions, so successfully used in the anti-apartheid struggle, are now being used to address the issues of AIDS and sexual assault.

The music

The music in the film is a complex and unexpected mix of African choral music, Chopin and specially written suspense music. The African music was sourced from churches in Tzaneen, and Alexandria and the protest music from a youth theatre group based in Tembisa on the outskirts of Johannesburg. Melbourne based South African singer Valanga Khosa, was in Johannesburg while I was there and he and his partner Andrea Watson contributed some of the music. The suspense music was written by local musician Andrew Richards, and the Chopin was played by Deirdre Paillas and Laura Henkel.

My hopes for this film

I have been actively developing this project since November 2000, but have wanted to make this film since 1990 when I realised the power of documentary in using the personal and particular to illuminate wider, universal issues that affect us all. The statistics for sexual assault in Australia are unacceptably high, and yet they represent only a portion of actual occurrences. One reason why this crime remains so hidden is the extremely small percentage of successful prosecutions in these cases, as well as the feelings of guilt and shame associated with this type of crime. Many women fear they will be blamed or not believed when they report this crime and if they do, they will undergo a traumatic experience in the justice system with little chance of success. So sexual assault remains the most hidden and fastest growing crime worldwide. I hope in this film to expose this situation through my mother's case and to suggest some reasons why this is occurring. I hope that the answers will resonate beyond the South African example and shed light on this complex problem for people around the world.

Cathy Henkel
Director
Hatchling Productions


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