Joost movie to hit the big screen

Joost movie to hit the big screen

The world big-screen premiere of Glory Game: The Joost van der Westhuizen Story will hit the big screen this month (August).

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The film tracks Joost van der Westhuizen as he battles the effects of Motor Neuron Disease (MND), a debilitating disease that strikes down scores of healthy adults every year, many of them athletes.

 

It's a very intimate portrayal, which also focuses on the global effort to find a cure, and Joost's campaign to provide better treatment in SA.

 

Directed and produced by award-winning journalist and film-maker, Odette Schwegler, and co-produced by Michael Yelseth and John Webb, the premiere took place at Montecasino, north of Johannesburg on 12 August 2015.

 

Van der Westhuizen is most famous for his ten-year role as scrum-half for the South African national rugby team – the Springboks – from 1993 to 2003. Viewers are given an uplifting insight into Joost’s world and the indomitable fighting spirit that made him one of South Africa’s favourite rugby heroes. Fans of the sport will be treated to fascinating behind-the-scenes stories from a string of the world’s greatest players who share candid moments from their careers.

 

This film not only documents van der Westhuizen’s battle with MND and his rugby exploits, it also takes viewers on a worldwide quest to conquer MND and bring better treatment to South African patients. “Local research is virtually non-existent, as are facilities offering care for people with neurodegenerative diseases,” explains Schwegler.

 

The Joost van der Westhuizen Centre for Neurodegeneration (JCN) was established by Joost last year to ignite research (previously non-existent in South Africa), and make  multi-disciplinary care available to patients suffering from neurodegenerative diseases. Dedicated clinics have been established at Tygerberg, Groote Schuur and Chris Hani Baragwanth with the aim of extending to all major public hospitals across the country. The JCN also supports MND specific research currently underway at Wits, Stellenbosch and UCT.

 

Dr Franclo Henning, Senior Specialist in Neurology at Stellenbosch University and Tygerberg Hospital, predicts that there are about 750 and 1500 new cases of MND diagnosed in South Africa every year. There are about 4,500 and 9,000 people living with the disease at any time.

 

In support of Joost and his work, cinema partners have offered to make screenings available for fundraising purposes from the 14th to the 20th of August with ticket-sale proceeds going to the JNC in support of research and patient care. It’s an opportunity for corporates to host an exclusive staff or suppliers/partners/client function in the run up to the Rugby World Cup – and help to save lives in the process.

 

Glory Game opens to the general public at selected cinemas across the country on the 21st of August.

 

“The making of this film took us on an incredible journey with an incredible man. It touched and changed the lives of everyone who worked on it, as I believe it will touch and change the lives of those who watch it,’’ says Schwegler.

 

The film was commissioned for broadcast by M-Net Movies and kykNET, and will be released on Box Office and later on PayTV – kykNET and M-Net movie channels in September 2015. After the premiere Glory Game will follow the film festival route.

 

Jacasport

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