The three Bushveldt Carbineers who were tried for murder at the end of the Anglo-Boer War, in the tent camp at "Fort Edward” (actually Nonyana farm). From left to right are George Witton (Traverse Le Goff), Peter Handcock (Aidan Lithgow) and Breaker Morant (Benedict Wall, a Kiwi actor, based in Australia). Morant and Handcock were executed before a British firing squad.
Filming an experience of a lifetime for extras
Date: 19 April 2013 By: Linda van der Westhuizen
History truly came alive as an international team filmed a documentary on the legendary Breaker Morant. Re-enactments of many of the scenes took place in the Soutpansberg, the location of the murders by Morant and the Bushveldt Carbineers for which two of them were eventually executed.
The budget for the documentary Morant, the retrial is one million Australian dollars. It is being filmed on three continents - Australia, South Africa and the UK - and will be eventually aired on the History channel.
Saturday (13 April) and Sunday’s filming was done on the farm Nonyana (Driekoppies) of the Haasbroeks. Hardus Haasbroek cleared the bush and moved the fences for the place where the tent camp was set up. “This is unbelievable. It’s wonderful to learn so much about history and to have all the people on our farm," said Ariëte Haasbroek.
The general feeling among the local extras and onlookers, as well as descendants of the victims, was that the filming of the re-enactments so far has been “the experience of a lifetime”. The scenes could, however, be described as quite violent and morose since all those who played Boers ended up dead.
“The premeditated murder of unarmed, sick and captured prisoners, witnesses, civilians and children” by the BVC towards the end of the Anglo-Boer war (1899 –1902) has been exposed in a book by local historian Charles Leach after some nine years of intensive research. Co-writer and co-director Nic Bleszynski from Australia, on the other hand, feels that it is grossly unfair that Morant and Handcock had been singled out and made scapegoats by the British Empire. The BVC was largely an Australian regiment that fought for the British. Leach was invited to be involved in the preparations and was consulted on site during the filming by Breaker Productions of Australia, who co-produced with Sabido productions of South Africa.
Though there are different views on the BVC episodes and Morant, no-one could disagree on what a handsome and winsome person lead actor Benedict Wall, a Kiwi based in Australia, is. He played the role of Morant and spent many hours in the hot sun, waiting for the cameras to roll, by patiently and amicably chatting to the local people and posing for photos. The 31-year-old actor said that it was his first visit to South Africa and that he was having a wonderful time. “The filming was challenging, but it was good. The challenge was that they added a scene where Morant finds out about the death of his friend, Captain Hunt, and that sparked the murders,” Wall commented on the first day of filming.
Peter Handcock, who was executed with Morant in February 1902, is played by actor Aidan Lithgow of Johannesburg. The friendly Traverse Le Goff, also fromJohannesburg, plays the role of the third accused, George Witton, who was not executed and wrote a book called Scapegoats of the Empire.
Gerrit Hendrik (27) played the role of Reverend Heese, who was murdered because he had witnessed the murder of eight Boers. When the eight Boers were executed in the re-enactment, some of the smaller children were worried about their daddies, but were happy to see them get up again.
It was quite ironic that the children who witnessed the filming helped to make holes in the Van Staden grave, so that the inside of the grave looked more rugged.
When the scene of the re-enactment of the murder of Van Staden and his two sons was filmed on Sunday (14th) the sky grew dark and thunder rumbled. The youngest son was very sick with fever and the father wanted a permit to get him to hospital. They were murdered by Morant and the BVC after they had to dig their own grave.
Earlier that day, co-writer Nic Bleszynski remarked: “We can’t film all the murders. There are far too many.” That was during the filming of the murder of trooper Van Buuren, who had joined the British. Van Buuren was played by Eben Saayman (23) who acted like he had done it all his life. Little Isabella Marais (10) played one of the children who were to be taken to the concentration camp in the then Pietersburg. Isabella’s great-grandmother in actual life spent time in a concentration camp.