I'm keen to take an Australian film to
Chile, to show them what my country's like. One set in
suburbia that captures the spirit of our culture, is neither violent
nor depressing and would make sense to someone not familiar with
Australian culture (thus ruling out The Castle,
sadly). The last criteria is a particularly challenging one,
as I'm sure you're aware. (One critic described Australian films as "so dispiriting that they make Leonard Cohen seem positively cheery".) The films I watched were Peaches, One
Perfect Day, Danny Deckchair (well, half-watched), Hey Hey
It's Esther Blueburger, Till Human Voices Wake Us, Prime
Mover, Mullet, Ten Empty, Two Fists One Heart,
Strange Planet, Travelling Light (half-watched), Three
Dollars, and Two Hands. A mixed bag. A few were
self-consciously Australian, not in an exuberant, Crocodile
Dundee sort of way or in an
earnest, Australia
sort of way, but in a mildly ironic, emblematic, indie sort of way.
Prime Mover,
Mullet,
and Travelling
Light are
the ones I'm thinking of. Plus some,
like Peaches and
Strange Planet,
which also had a quietly hopeful, prosaic plot.
Some
moved beyond this quiet, suburban irony by exploring
subcultures, raving in One Perfect Day,
boxing in Two Fists One Heart;
teenage experience, Hey Hey It's Esther Blueburger,
Travelling Light, Till Human Voices Wake Us;
and the criminal world, Two
Hands. Danny Deckchair
was one of those gentle,
self-mocking comedies that I don't find funny. Ten Empty
was your typical, unredemptive
tale of family dysfunction. Till Human Voices
Wake Us delved into fantasy and
magic realism.
Prime Mover and
Mullet were both good, but my favourites were Three Dollars, a
sincere, character-driven, redemptive story of a seemingly ordinary
man's downfall; Two Fists One Heart,
a believably complex story about boxing, fathers and sons,
girlfriends, and Australian-Italian culture; and Two Hands, an
entertaining fast-paced tale of an unwilling crim. This won the
coverted prize of Going In Fiona's Suitcase, for its laconic, unhurried conversations. These three were excellent films,
and gave me hope that we can produce hopeful, winsome,
sophisticated films after all.
3 comments:
Did you think of Look Both Ways?
No, for some reason I didn't - can't remember if that was accidental or deliberate. Is it suburban and hopeful?
How about 'Red Dog' when it comes out?
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