

A failed track coach finally finds someone who he believes has what it takes to win. The Comrades Marathon is a 90-k race in South Africa. An aging running coach, Barry, wants to field a winner; he's working with four men from a factory, but when he's fired to make way for a smooth, corporate type, he's at loose ends. Then he sees Christine, a Namibian immigrant who runs to forget her troubles. He offers to coach her and soon she's living at his house, following his diet and training regimen. But his single-mindedness gets to her: she wants a job and a place of her own. Plus, the man who replaced Barry likes her and wants her away from Barry. Can runner and coach (woman and man, African and European) sort out their complex relationship before the race? Written by
Acting
Armin Mueller-Stahl's barely-contained desperation is devastating.
Cinematography
The Comrades Marathon footage will make your legs hurt by proxy.
Writing
Refuses easy coach-athlete romance tropes — thank god.
Director
Jean Stewart
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
The Comrades Marathon is real — it's the world's oldest and largest ultramarathon, run since 1921 between Durban and Pietermaritzburg.
Released in 2001, the film quietly interrogates post-apartheid South Africa through its German-Namibian-South African triangle — colonial echoes everywhere.
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