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December 3, 2009
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Home > Movies > Reviews > 2008 |  
Australia
| posted 11/26/2008




Australia

Our rating: 4 Stars - Excellent

Your rating:  

MPAA rating: PG-13
(for some violence, a scene of sensuality, and brief strong language)

Genre: Adventure, Romance, Western

Theater release:
November 26, 2008
by Twentieth Century Fox

Directed by: Baz Luhrmann

Runtime: 2 hours 45 minutes

Cast: Nicole Kidman (Lady Sarah Ashley), Hugh Jackman (Drover), David Wenham (Neil Fletcher), Brandon Walters (Nullah), David Gulpilil (King George)

Related: Talk About It/Family Corner


Early in Baz Luhrmann's Australia, one of the main characters says of his country: "this land has a strange power." And indeed, if one surveys the landscape of films about Australia, many of them (The Last Wave, Picnic at Hanging Rock, The Proposition) seem to express this sentiment: Australia is a nation of strange, captivating, haunting power. In his epic film about his native country, Luhrmann (Moulin Rouge!) affirms and exaggerates this Australian mythos, to spectacular effect. Indeed, his impressively rendered film has a "strange power" of its own. 

This is a film of great ambition and artistic audacity. That the title is simply Australia tips us off to the intentions of Luhrmann: not necessarily to make the definitive film about the complicated country/continent, but to provide an over-the-top, grandiose, slightly-irreverent-but-ultimately-sincere explosion of cinema that hearkens back to the golden age of Hollywood epics.

Nicole Kidman as Sarah Ashley
Nicole Kidman as Sarah Ashley

Fittingly set in the late 1930s/early '40s (the Hollywood era it most recalls), as WWII encroaches on its northern coast, Australia has a relatively simple story for a film of such scope (and formidable length). It follows the prim, parasol-toting aristocrat, Lady Sarah Ashley (Nicole Kidman), as she comes to Australia from England to check in on her husband, who owns and runs the Faraway Downs cattle ranch in Northern Australia. Ashley finds her husband dead under suspicious circumstances, his ranch under threat of seizure by a rival cattle company. She enlists the help of a dashing, rugged cattle driver named Drover (Hugh Jackman), as well as the aboriginal helpers on the ranch, to keep Faraway Downs afloat and competitive in the wartime beef market. She forges a special connection with a young "half-caste" (half aborigine, half white) orphan boy, Nullah (Brandon Walters), who is also the film's cheeky narrator.

Before too long, melodramatic intrigue, sweeping romance, and bravura action ensues. Lady Ashley and Drover hate each other at first, but gradually fall in love (in a familiar, pleasing, "Indiana and Marion" sort of way). Meanwhile, a villain emerges—Neil Fletcher (the excellent David Wenham, who played Faramir in the Lord of the Rings films)—who is determined to ruin Lady Ashley, particularly because she is friendly to the natives and harbors little "half-caste" children like Nullah. At this segregated time in Australia's history, whites were the landowners, blacks (aborigines) were the help, and "half-castes" (usually the product of white men having their way with aborigine women) were the least desirable of all. These "unfortunate" byproducts of illicit interracial relationships were highly stigmatized and best kept out of sight. In the 1930s and '40s, mixed-race children were plucked from their indigenous communities and shipped to church missions or state institutions in efforts to re-educate them. These children became known as the "Stolen Generations."

Hugh Jackman as Drover
Hugh Jackman as Drover

On one level, Australia is a self-conscious examination of race. It's Nullah's tale of being an outcast, an in-between child searching for a home and a people: "Me half-caste, me 'creamy,' me belong to no one," he says. Indeed, while Nullah finds a temporary home and family with Lady Ashley and Drover, he also feels the pull of his indigenous heritage. His aboriginal grandfather (David Gulpilil), who is referred to as King George or simply "Magic Man," is always standing in the background, or up on a mountain surveying the landscape, singing or chanting in deep, magical ways. Nullah feels and understands things from King George that his white friends Ashley and Drover cannot. He's truly torn between two worlds.

In the end, though, that is what Australia is—a nation of conflicting cultures, outcasts, and displacement. "Home" and "identity" were not slam-dunk concepts for the nation to realize. It took work, just as it does in the film—for Lady Ashley, Drover, and Nullah. They are a diverse trio, bound together by circumstance and a nascent patriotism, but mostly love. For them, "home" is a hope—a future that might be lived together in harmony, one day, when the peace comes. It won't come through any official channels, and it won't come through the church (Christian clergy are largely portrayed as villains in the film, with one exception), but rather it will come from an organic and determined spirit of equality and freedom.




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[Reader Reviews]
Average User Rating: 

Displaying 1 - 3 of 6 comments.See all comments
the fairy of HAPPINESS   Posted: October 11, 2009 7:46 PM
Not rated
I loved this movie. The action and adventure, the romance, everything. i do have to say the witchcraft was a bit weird at times, but i loved it just the same. One of my favorite things about it was that fact that the whole story wasn't centered around the romance, it was centered around the circumstances. The characters were very well developed. All in all, this was one of the first hollywood movies that I have seen in a long time that was really, really good.

watcherings   Posted: May 11, 2009 10:49 PM
I didnt like the way hellewood sutterly mixed witchcraft and psychic abilities in with this movie. Seducing society to accept and ignore witchcraft believing it to be innocent and non threatening. The bible clearly warns us about the dangers of witchcraft, soothsayers and neckromancing yet this movie makes it appear mystical or enchanting. Seducing us with romance and love, when in fact what were they really trying to teach you? to become lukewarm in regards to witchcraft and psychic powers? We are in fact in the end times, be on guard church.

morefaith   Posted: April 30, 2009 4:25 PM
My kind of movie!!!I love everything about it! drama, romance, comedy, history and the cinematography was breathtaking. It was a very ambitious feat and I respect Baz Luhrmann for attempting to bring back a piece of the old genre. I can tell that strong bonds were formed, as well as a sense of solidarity, between the actors and the director. This is evident by the tourism ads that Luhrmann produced shortly after the movie. I was disappointed with all the acrimony from the critics. THIS MOVIE'S GOT HEART and Brandon Walters is the heart of it. He's got natural and effortless talent and I look forward to seeing him progress as an actor. I pray that doors will open for him.

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