SMS Sugar Man
SMS Sugar Man is a South African narrative film shot entirely on Sony Ericsson W900i camera phones in 2008.[1] The experimental feature film was directed by Aryan Kaganof and used eight cell phones to make the film.[2][3] SMS Sugar Man is the first feature-length film in the world to be made entirely with mobile camera phones.[2][1][4] PlotThe film reveals the story of a pimp and two high-class prostitutes with some traveling incidents around Johannesburg on a Christmas Eve. Cast
DevelopmentSMS Sugar Man was shot in eleven days with eight camera phones for less than 1 million rand ($164,100). Producer Michelle Wheatley said, "We wanted to make a radically low-budget film to show that anyone can do this".[2] AnalysisLizelle Bisschoff and Ann Overbergh wrote in "Digital as the New Popular in African Cinema? Case Studies from the Continent", published in Research in African Literatures, that SMS Sugar Man is a "semi-pornographic and highly erotic and subversive film, with a political subtext".[5] They said that even though popular and easily accessible equipment was used to make the film, it cannot be called "popular art", but rather "underground" and "experimental".[5] ReceptionIn a review of SMS Sugar Man in Under Ground Film Journal, Mike Everleth described the film as "a poetic, haunting film that uses a bold new technology to capture the most basic and primal of human interactions".[1] He said that despite being shot entirely with camera phones, the film "never comes across as being gimmicky", and "never takes the cheap route in the telling of the story".[1] See alsoReferences
External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to Mobile phone films. Information related to SMS Sugar Man |