South Africa, thanks to the 2010 World Cup, has been topical lately. But what I have to offer is not a football story, but an unusual reportage located in South Africa's most popular holiday destination, Cape Town.

Cape Town has a surprisingly large film industry. It's not like Bollywood or Nollywood (Nigeria), where home grown stories dominate. Most shoots are in fact advertisements for foreign companies selling everything from chewing gum to yoghurt (the favourable exchange rate and sunny climate make it worth the long trip to the tip of Africa).  What is fascinating is that these companies turn locations in Cape Town -- an iconic African city -- into European, British or American scenes. So a characteristic wine farm is transformed into a Dutch homestead, or a Long Street cafe becomes a Parisian bistro for a day or two.

I have spent months (summer season 2009-2010) on film sets, documenting the way the industry semi-colonises slices of the city. The images capture the appealing artifice of the advertising world; the careful manufacturing of a sense of place. But glimpses of the real Cape Town (a characteristic mountain or building) can also be noticed by the attentive viewer. The images, crooked landscapes of a crooked place, play with the friction between reality and fiction while portraying the area with humour and marvel.

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