🎬 FILM STUDY GUIDE: District 9 by Neill Blomkamp
Compiled by Miss M Mchunu
🔍 Overview
Title: District 9
Director: Neill Blomkamp
Release: 2009
Genre: Science Fiction / Dystopian / Docu-drama
Setting: Johannesburg, South Africa, in an alternate 1982–2010 timeline
Duration: 112 minutes
Produced by: Peter Jackson
Main Actor: Sharlto Copley as Wikus van de Merwe
Rating: R (violence, language, disturbing images)
🧠 Plot Summary
In 1982, an alien spaceship appears over Johannesburg. Onboard, a malnourished species—
later derogatorily nicknamed "Prawns"—is found. The South African government sets up a
camp called District 9 to house them.
Years later, the camp deteriorates into a militarized ghetto. The government assigns a private
company, Multi-National United (MNU), to relocate the aliens to District 10. Wikus van de
Merwe, a mid-level bureaucrat, leads the operation but accidentally exposes himself to a
mysterious alien fluid, beginning a horrific transformation into one of the aliens. As he
becomes the target of MNU, he teams up with an alien named Christopher Johnson to try and
reverse the mutation, exposing deep government and corporate corruption along the way.
📜 Key Themes & Ideas
1. Xenophobia and Racism
The film mirrors South Africa’s apartheid past. The derogatory treatment of aliens
symbolizes the dehumanization of marginalized groups.
The aliens are confined, brutalized, and denied human rights—highlighting the
dangers of othering.
2. Humanity and Identity
Wikus's transformation forces him to question his identity, empathy, and what it
means to be "human."
His journey from oppressor to victim humanizes the aliens and deconstructs power
dynamics.
, 3. Corporate Exploitation
MNU's motives are not humanitarian but driven by greed and military power.
Reflects the dangers of corporate control over vulnerable communities and unethical
science.
4. Media and Propaganda
The mockumentary style critiques how media manipulates public opinion and distorts
the truth.
It reveals how systemic violence is normalized.
5. Post-Colonial Allegory
District 9 is an allegory for the displacement of Black South Africans during
apartheid, especially the forced removals from District Six in Cape Town.
Questions Western intervention and colonial legacies in Africa.
🎥 Cinematographic Techniques
📸 1. Mockumentary Style
Uses handheld cameras, interviews, CCTV footage, and news reports.
Creates a sense of realism and urgency.
🎞️
2. Handheld Camera & Shaky Cam
Reflects chaos, fear, and instability, especially during confrontations and violence.
🖼️
3. Mise-en-Scène
The alien slums mirror township conditions—dirt, corrugated metal, refuse—realistic
visual parallels to apartheid-era forced removals.
Use of barbed wire, barricades, and slumdogs creates a sense of oppression.
🎨 4. Lighting & Colour
Gritty, dusty tones dominate, emphasizing decay and moral corruption.
Shifts in lighting reflect Wikus’s transformation and changing perspective.
🎧 5. Sound Design
Use of South African languages, alien clicks, and industrial sounds add authenticity.
Silence or eerie sound during emotional or transformational moments intensifies
emotion.
Compiled by Miss M Mchunu
🔍 Overview
Title: District 9
Director: Neill Blomkamp
Release: 2009
Genre: Science Fiction / Dystopian / Docu-drama
Setting: Johannesburg, South Africa, in an alternate 1982–2010 timeline
Duration: 112 minutes
Produced by: Peter Jackson
Main Actor: Sharlto Copley as Wikus van de Merwe
Rating: R (violence, language, disturbing images)
🧠 Plot Summary
In 1982, an alien spaceship appears over Johannesburg. Onboard, a malnourished species—
later derogatorily nicknamed "Prawns"—is found. The South African government sets up a
camp called District 9 to house them.
Years later, the camp deteriorates into a militarized ghetto. The government assigns a private
company, Multi-National United (MNU), to relocate the aliens to District 10. Wikus van de
Merwe, a mid-level bureaucrat, leads the operation but accidentally exposes himself to a
mysterious alien fluid, beginning a horrific transformation into one of the aliens. As he
becomes the target of MNU, he teams up with an alien named Christopher Johnson to try and
reverse the mutation, exposing deep government and corporate corruption along the way.
📜 Key Themes & Ideas
1. Xenophobia and Racism
The film mirrors South Africa’s apartheid past. The derogatory treatment of aliens
symbolizes the dehumanization of marginalized groups.
The aliens are confined, brutalized, and denied human rights—highlighting the
dangers of othering.
2. Humanity and Identity
Wikus's transformation forces him to question his identity, empathy, and what it
means to be "human."
His journey from oppressor to victim humanizes the aliens and deconstructs power
dynamics.
, 3. Corporate Exploitation
MNU's motives are not humanitarian but driven by greed and military power.
Reflects the dangers of corporate control over vulnerable communities and unethical
science.
4. Media and Propaganda
The mockumentary style critiques how media manipulates public opinion and distorts
the truth.
It reveals how systemic violence is normalized.
5. Post-Colonial Allegory
District 9 is an allegory for the displacement of Black South Africans during
apartheid, especially the forced removals from District Six in Cape Town.
Questions Western intervention and colonial legacies in Africa.
🎥 Cinematographic Techniques
📸 1. Mockumentary Style
Uses handheld cameras, interviews, CCTV footage, and news reports.
Creates a sense of realism and urgency.
🎞️
2. Handheld Camera & Shaky Cam
Reflects chaos, fear, and instability, especially during confrontations and violence.
🖼️
3. Mise-en-Scène
The alien slums mirror township conditions—dirt, corrugated metal, refuse—realistic
visual parallels to apartheid-era forced removals.
Use of barbed wire, barricades, and slumdogs creates a sense of oppression.
🎨 4. Lighting & Colour
Gritty, dusty tones dominate, emphasizing decay and moral corruption.
Shifts in lighting reflect Wikus’s transformation and changing perspective.
🎧 5. Sound Design
Use of South African languages, alien clicks, and industrial sounds add authenticity.
Silence or eerie sound during emotional or transformational moments intensifies
emotion.