Production was assisted by the South African Defence Force (SADF).
[1] Boetie van Tonder, a young Afrikaner, faces conscription into the South African military.
Although initially determined to resist national service and defy instruction, he quickly finds comfort in the company of his fellow conscripts as they weather the harshness of basic training and their subsequent deployment to the Angolan border.
[2] Literary analyst Monica Popescu described Boetie Gaan Border Toe and its sequel, Boetie Op Manoeuvres, as works which essentially romanticised the South African Border War and devoted a disproportionate amount of emphasis to the "chivalrous conduct of SADF soldiers".
[2] Boetie Gaan Border Toe was a financial success, breaking South African box office records.