Jimmy in Pienk

Sun Feb 16, 2014 – 5:00 pm — Bushel & Peck’s
Thu Feb 20, 2014 –  7:30 pm — Club Impulse
Fri Feb 21, 2014 –  2:00 pm — La Casa Grande
Sat Feb 22, 2014 –  2:00 pm — La Casa Grande
Sat Fri Feb 22, 2014 – 7:30 pm — Bushel & Peck’s

Community Partners:  First Class Cosmetology School, Totally Tan Inc.

Jimmy in Pienk
Khaki is the new pink


Jimmy in the Pienk
Category:  Comedy / Romance
Country:  South Africa
Language:  English subtitles
Rating:  PG-13
Runtime:  93
Director:  Hanneke Schutte
Producer:  Zaheer  Goodman-Bhyat

Filmmaker Attending

 

Synopsis:

JIMMY IN PINK is a quirky comedy about Jimmy Bester, a rugged seventh generation corn farmer who can give an accurate five-day weather forecast by simply sniffing the wind.

He lives out his creative impulses by shearing sheep on the neighbouring farms – something he has to hide from his father who believes that “men are not creative”.

When Jimmy’s father suddenly dies in a freak accident, he is confronted by two menacing (and comedic) loan sharks who come to collect what his father owes. While packing his father’s things, a distraught Jimmy discovers that his father had a twin brother, who was exiled from the farm for being gay. Fred is now a multi-billionaire hair product tycoon based in Cape Town.

For the first time in his life Jimmy gathers the courage to leave his home and travel to Cape Town to seek help from his uncle, but Fred has a bitter grudge against his family and he hatches a plan of revenge.

He convinces Jimmy to enter his reality TV show, Next Super Stylist. If Jimmy wins the competition, he can take home the prize money. With no experience in hairdressing, Jimmy knows that he is likely to fail, but he is willing to risk becoming a laughing stock if it offers him even just the slightest chance at saving his family. Under the fabulous tutelage of Bunny, his gay hair guru, Jimmy sets out to master the art of hairdressing and becoming a metro-sexual man.

NOTE:  Synopsis are typically provided directly by the filmmaker themselves. Often English is not their first language. We ask reader’s understanding for less-than-perfect language and grammar