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Genre:
Adventure/Drama/War
Director:
Baz Luhrmann
Certificate: Australia
was rated 12A by the Irish Film Censor's Office (www.ifco.ie)
i.e. suitable for those of 12 years of age or upwards. Persons under
12 must be accompanied by an adult.
Violence = moderate. Drugs = none.
Sex/Nudity = mild. Language = moderate.
OFFICIAL WEBSITE:
Australia |
Even World War II could not sway
corporate greed, the Catholic menace and a driven heart. It’s a beautiful
thing when the romance in a movie equally sways the emotions of men and
women and Australia does just that.
Lady Sarah Ashley (Nicole Kidman)
decides to leave England and go to Australia to meet with her husband
about their cattle ranch, Far Away Downs. Her husband introduces her to
Drover (Hugh Jackman), a cattle drover. On her ranch, she meets Nullah
(Brandon Walters), a mixed race aboriginal child and his mother Daisy
(Ursula Yovich). Australian cattle baron King Carney is doing everything
he can to have a cattle monopoly.
The first half an hour of the movie
is a cheeky World War II era action story beginning. Australia moves like
a jive, lots of steps at a quick pace, playfully entertaining the audience
with its speed and precision. It is sprinkled with unexpected moments of
levity. Occasionally I worried it would go over the top, but Baz Luhrmann,
the director, restrained it from becoming a slapstick comedy.
The light attitude of the first few
minutes of Australia only lead the audience by the nose into a false sense
of security. The story begins to get darker, the subject matter more
intense, and starts to resonate more loudly. Anger, fear and frustration
become real emotions the audience feels, even though they don’t understand
what’s going on.
One thing that’s easy to understand
is the romantic chemistry in Australia. When Nicole Kidman and Hugh
Jackman get within three frames of each other, the audience can feel the
heat. Their first kiss left me feeling like I had been kissed as deeply
and passionately as Ashley. There is a scene that made all the women in
the audience sit against the back of their seats with their mouths open,
aghast at the beauty of Hugh Jackman.
Before the men refuse to see this on
“chick flick” grounds, don’t worry. Men will have no problem enjoying
the romance for men: cattle drives and war. Heck, there is even a bit of
hunting, horseback riding and bar fighting.
Australia oozes visual style and
smears it across the audience like warm lotion. The use of warm and cool
lighting to express mood makes the audience sink deeply into the story.
Almost every scene in Australia is enhanced by the careful attention to
the way it looks. There are the occasional mishaps with the visual
effects, especially the dead cow stand-in but they don’t take away from
the overall splendour of Australia.
I knew nothing about Australia’s
“Stolen Generations.” This nauseating chapter in Australian history,
explained in detail in Australia, armed me with one more bullet in my
arsenal against the Catholic Church. I always appreciate a movie that
shows these religious groups for what they are: a criminal organization
with no regard for the dignity of their flock, and they will do whatever
the good people near them will allow them to get away with. This was not
all the church’s doing but they are a willing participant in disgusting
acts of racial cleansing. Not a shocker to anyone who knows anything
about religion’s footprint on the world.
Australia tempts the heart to take a
journey of pain and joy but rewards it with an experience that lasts far
beyond the movie’s end.
Reviewed by
LaRae Meadows,
Premier Movie
Reviews 2008
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