• Indie Short Mag TV
Indie Shorts Mag
  • Home
  • Interviews
  • News
    • Film Festival News
    • Short Film News
  • Reviews
    • Short Film
    • Documentary
    • Web Series
  • Hall of Fame
  • Short Film Festival – 2025Accepting Films
  • Tutorials
    • Pre-Production
    • Post-Production
  • Submit Short Film
    • Submit Short Film for Review
    • Submit Web Series for Review
    • Interview Submission Form
No Result
View All Result
Indie Shorts Mag
  • Home
  • Interviews
  • News
    • Film Festival News
    • Short Film News
  • Reviews
    • Short Film
    • Documentary
    • Web Series
  • Hall of Fame
  • Short Film Festival – 2025Accepting Films
  • Tutorials
    • Pre-Production
    • Post-Production
  • Submit Short Film
    • Submit Short Film for Review
    • Submit Web Series for Review
    • Interview Submission Form
No Result
View All Result
Indie Shorts Mag
No Result
View All Result

The Last Ranger: Terrible Lessons and a Legacy of Steadfast Effort in Poaching Drama

Indie Shorts Mag Team by Indie Shorts Mag Team
13 Dec 2024
in Reviews
0
The Last Ranger - Short Film Review - Indie Shorts Mag

Cindy Lee’s The Last Ranger, loosely adapted from a true story, follows a ranger’s efforts to protect existing life while she also sets off the creation of the heir to her legacy. Carried by the performances of its actors, the film soundly accomplishes being deeply emotional—there will be tears—without being maudlin. 

The film brings to mind Toby Wosskow’s Sides of a Horn, sharing the subject and some of the narrative conflicts, but something else comes to life in Lee’s film through her dual heroines, Khuselwa, aka Khusi (Avumile Qongqo), and Litha (Liyabona Mroqoza). Khuselwa is the titular ranger, looking out for her rhinos at a time of vanished tourists and income. Litha, similarly afflicted, has no one to sell her father’s figurines to sell to. 

The Last Ranger - Short Film Review - Indie Shorts Mag

Writing credits are shared between David S. Lee, Darwin Shaw, and Will Hawkes. The plot courses a tumultuous day in their life as they unexpectedly—but with the casual tenderness of everyday affection—cross paths on their way to what work might come their way. Only, for Khusi, this tends to include dart guns and rifles. It starts out happily with a montage of the wilderness. Litha loves everything. Everything loves her back in the early morning light. The vitality of the music holds the sequence together. 

As Khusi almost instinctively begins to mentor the vivacious, “wild” Litha, the film blooms into its best part—watching, learning, exchanging the essence of being in the world. Mroqoza has a giant of a performer to share the screen with, so it is understandable that she might not always be the most remarkable in a scene: Qongqo is simply magnetic as the stoic Khusi. When Litha asks Khuselwa if she has any babies, her answer has all the burnished ferocity of a wild mother. 

The Last Ranger - Short Film Review - Indie Shorts Mag

Other characters complete the cast as a precise whole. Litha’s father (Makhaola Ndebele), drained dry of options and money; Khusi’s superior, Robert (David S. Lee), who similarly is stretched thin, if in different ways. Together, they are a set of characters variously contending with a harsh life made worse by covid. And together, they all have eyes on a rhinoceros, Thandi. It is a mark of the film’s merit that at no point does it lean towards cutesy human-animal bond shenanigans. Thandi is left to her devices, meant only to be watched over, with all the gravitas that is required of the duty. When it is sweet, it is with the steadying influence of Khusi and Qongqo. 

Things go wrong. Just about everything that could go wrong does. The last glimmer of hope has to claw its way out of the depths of utter bleakness. Litha’s violent coming of age is marked by dangers becoming too real in the final act, and requiring the mediating hand of Khusi’s camcorder. Strains of sheer tragedy and a different kind of poignancy emerge together. When there is nothing you can do to save the day, you can still document its ravages. 

Watch The Last Ranger Short Film Trailer

The Last Ranger: Terrible Lessons and a Legacy of Steadfast Effort in Poaching Drama
  • Direction
  • Cinematography
  • Screenplay
  • Editing
  • Music
4.1
Tags: DramaDrama Short Film ReviewPrivateReviewShort Film Reviews
Previous Post

Bajo La Tierra: Love Lives on in the Soil and Air in 19th Century Tale of Toil and Loss

Indie Shorts Mag Team

Indie Shorts Mag Team

Related Posts

Bajo La Tierra - Short Film Review - Indie Shorts Mag
Reviews

Bajo La Tierra: Love Lives on in the Soil and Air in 19th Century Tale of Toil and Loss

13th December 2024
Hatirlama - Short Film Review - Indie Shorts Mag
Reviews

Hatirlama: A Moving Tribute To A Stranger’s Kindness

11th December 2024

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


Sponsored

Advertise Here

Featured Post

Announcing Short Of The Year Awards 2023

Announcing Short Of The Year Awards 2023

Latest Podcast

  • Recent Reviews

About Indie Shorts Mag

Indie Shorts Mag is a publishing agency that works within the ‘short film circuit’. We review short films, documentaries, music videos and web series, amongst others. We stand out amongst the short film review sites for being multi-diverse & global in our platform and reach.
Our team works tirelessly to help promote, publicize and market your short films that deserve the shout-out! Besides reviews, we host film festival news as it’s a known fact that the film festival buzz is unmissable and we ensure you aren’t left behind!
We aspire to form a niche for ourselves as the ‘short film magazine’ that remains the hub for filmmakers & their audience.

Popular Topics

  • Announcements
  • Articles
  • Crowdfunding
  • Editorial
  • Film Festival News
  • Film Festivals
  • India Edition
  • Interviews
  • Marketing
  • Marketing
  • News
  • Online Premiere
  • Post-Production
  • Pre-Production
  • Reviews
  • Short Film
  • Short Film Competition
  • Short Film News
  • Tutorials
  • Web Series

Indie Shorts Mag on Instagram

Follow Us On Instagram

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact Us
  • Submit Article
  • Write for Us
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy

© 2015-2024 Indie Shorts Mag.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Interviews
  • News
    • Film Festival News
    • Short Film News
  • Reviews
    • Short Film
    • Documentary
    • Web Series
  • Hall of Fame
  • Short Film Festival – 2025
  • Tutorials
    • Pre-Production
    • Post-Production
  • Submit Short Film
    • Submit Short Film for Review
    • Submit Web Series for Review
    • Interview Submission Form

© 2015-2024 Indie Shorts Mag.