The feature film Otelo Burning (2011) tells the story of black youth ‘tasting freedom’ by surfing waves in late apartheid South Africa and reflects on the emergence of a new national order by drawing Nelson Mandela’s release from prison into its plot. This article situates the film in a genealogy of black-centred representations of Durban beach – including Peter Abrahams’s memoir Tell Freedom (1954), Drum photographer Bob Gosani’s framing of Dolly Rathebe at a Durban beach (1957), Lewis Nkosi’s Mating Birds (1983) and the post-apartheid film Jerusalema (2008) – and in relation to international surfing fiction and film – particularly Kum Nunn’s novel trilogy and the films Point Break (1991) and Blue Crush (2002). It focuses on the settings o...