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 Australia review: Good, but no classic, and way, way too long 

Australia review: Good, but no classic, and way, way too long

18 Nov, 2008 08:47 AM
IN WHAT has to be the most hyped and self-consciously local film since 1984's The Man From Snowy River, the anxiously anticipated Australia is not a bad film. But it's far from a great one, and certainly not one destined to be a classic.

That's not to say it won't be popular, possibly wildly so. The film has broad appeal, particularly to the chick-flick market, with its sweeping, overlong melodramatic saga about cattle drives, the stolen generations, the bombing of Darwin and Hugh Jackman's abs. The story involves a prissy English woman (Nicole Kidman) who, with the help of a stockman known enigmatically as "The Drover" (Jackman), tries saving her troubled cattle station from a greedy cattleman (Bryan Brown) and his evil relative (David Wenham).

Blended into the tale is the touching story of a little boy of mixed blood, who serves as a symbol for the stolen generations and racism.

The film is fine, and never boring but, boy, is it overlong. At a mammoth 165 minutes it feels too much like a work-in-progress. There is a lot of narrative flab and longueurs in the first two hours and the film often has the pace of a steamroller with engine trouble.

Luhrmann also seems so eager to trowel on the Aussie cliches — obviously to appeal to the tourist markets! — that Australia is often simply irritating. The word "crikey" is spouted so often the film often sounds like a tribute to Steve Irwin.

As for the visuals, the film is pretty — you cannot point a camera at the outback and not get something impressive — but there are only so many wide shots of the Aussie outback that the human mind can stand.

In terms of spectacle, the film boasts one impressive sequence involving a stampede of cattle heading for a cliff. Lovely stuff. On the flipside, however, the much-touted bombing of Darwin by the Japanese is way too brief and resembles off-cuts from the movie Pearl Harbor.

Performances are fine throughout, with Wenham as the bad guy cattle heir putting in the best work. As the quintesential outback Aussie bloke, Jackman is a sort of ocker liberal who stands up for women and the right of blackfellas to drink in pubs. He's good value, as usual.

Australia is a far bigger deal for Kidman, though, in that she finally stars in a film that people might actually be interested in seeing.

Since her well-deserved Oscar win for The Hours Kidman has been box-office poison after such disasters as Bewitched, The Stepford Wives, The Invasion, Fur and Margot at the Wedding. If the film connects, it might signal a badly needed career turnaround for her.

More importantly, local films with black themes or major indigenous characters tend to do poorly, so if Australia succeeds here it could represent a breakthrough. We've always had trouble dealing with racial issues on film, so, in that regard, the film could be a landmark.

If only Baz had made the damn thing shorter by at least half an hour.

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Date: Newest first | Oldest first
I went to the premiere and it was brilliant. A truly enjoyable movie - funny, and moving. Too long? I enjoyed every minute of it.
Posted by Jay, 25/11/2008 2:35:38 PM
Using the studios to give them a pathetic portrayal and the australian psyche a big kick up the arse in order to promote indigenous rights. Baz is genius. I feel a little oscar coming along...
Posted by jason, 28/11/2008 9:33:37 PM
From the beginning of this film I couldn't decide if it was a comedy or a fantasy. I found it uneven and overly long. Kidman's performance was wrought with multiple tears and awkward dashes over land, piers and raging war scenes. Epicly long but not epicly good. It did not deserve the name Australia.
Posted by Mary eh, 8/12/2008 11:52:23 PM
What a shocker - reminded me of any number of bad Westerns & the shots of the Oz outback seemed to be confined to a brief look at the Bungle Bungles, one waterfall and Lake Eyre(?). And the computer-generated scenes, notably the stampede and bombing of "Darwin", reminded me of some of the scenes from the Three Amigos. The first half hour was almost pure comedy, the next hour John Wayne & the last part pure schmaltz. David Wenham was forced to play the sort of villain you found in Victorian melodramas, stroking his waxed moustache and tying young ladies to railway tracks. Young Brandon and David Gulpilil were the only shining lights in this lump of dross - what a shame! Save your money (pity the Tourist Commission seems to have done the taxpayers' - yet again)!
Posted by samo, 10/12/2008 12:22:58 AM
The problem this film has is the US market. If it's not about America, or an action-packed leave-your-brain-at-the-door thrill ride, or a feel-good funny movie set somewhere on the eastern US seaboard, it'll flop, because your average American simply lacks sufficient grey matter to get their head around a movie like this.
Posted by richard, 10/12/2008 10:44:26 AM
i went and saw australia last week and it was by far the best movie that i have seen in a long time, truely brilliant movie, it was all it was cracked up to be
Posted by amber, 14/12/2008 2:51:00 PM
Just saw Australia last night. It's not as bad as people made it to be be, I enjoyed most of it, but I have to agree the transition of the mood were sometimes uneven. Baz's flamboyant style works amazingly for something theatrical like Romeo & Juliet and M.Rouge, but I felt at times in Australia, the special effects made the movie less sincere. At times a tad tacky. However I think I was expecting too much maybe because, hello..it's Baz! BUT whoever said this sucks, need to get their head out of their own arse.
Posted by FND, 27/12/2008 3:48:50 AM
buckleys chance comment "I would rather have experimental pile surgery than sit through 3 hours of Baaaaaaaaaaz directing with his head up his a*se (AGAIN). Crikey indeed. Give me a real film any day." Lets see you produce something worth watching!
Posted by robst, 13/01/2009 8:08:30 PM
Just seen Australia and was impressed! Given the excellent casting, particularly lead roles, and strong/involving/engaging storyline this film WILL go down as one of Kidman's best. The emotional relationships were played out very well and events culminated exceptionally strongly in a happy ending for all. Can only think that those review comments citing "tacky" this and "shocker" that haven't actually seen it. The box office numbers will add welcome embarrasment to those intent on raising non-issues. Just the stuff cinema should be made of and we need a lot more of it! Well done!!
Posted by MPComment, 14/01/2009 1:13:45 AM
I seen this at our local 'The Apollo' in Saltcoats, on a wet Tuesday night. The place was full and everyone but two (rather old ladies) thouroughly enjoyed it. Well done Baz!
Posted by The Stolte, 21/01/2009 8:15:00 AM
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