BOTTOM
LINE:
There’s a lot
of noble filmmaking intention underpinning this sweeping epic but
unfortunately director Baz Luhrmann does not show enough directorial
control of the material, leaving a film that is corny, sometimes
silly, stunningly beautiful, but mostly lacking a cohesive narrative
and theme.
THE
GOOD: The concept
of this film in a Hollywood sense is highly unusual. Director Baz
Luhrmann deserves credit for twisting the arm off of some studio
executive in Tinseltown for allowing him to spend well over $100
million on a film that probably will not resonate with the American
audience. Given that he was given the green light, it is understandable
that Luhrmann wanted to put as much as he could in to the film and
in this respect, the film does not disappoint. The images are bold
and magnificent, the characters are colourful and larger than life,
and the story is epic, covering much Australian thematic ground
such as life in the Outback on a cattle station in the late 1930’s,
the treatment of Aboriginal children by the authorities (ie the
Stolen Generations), the bombing of Darwin by the Japanese, culminating
with a massive, sweeping love story between the lead characters
Sarah Ashley (Nicole Kidman) and the Drover (Hugh Jackman). There
are moments in this film that are magical, that capture the frontier
spirit and the larger than life scenarios depicted. The bombing
of Darwin is of course the major epic sequence in the film, but
scenes of Lady Ashley, the Drover and the team moving fifteen hundred
cattle across the Outback and the dangers that they face from their
competitors is likewise spectacular, which is an unexpected surprise
given one might not automatically think that moving cows around
across a desert would be cinematically interesting. Hugh Jackman
is perfect as the Drover; it’s hard to believe that Russell
Crowe was the original choice for this role because he would not
have suited it all. The astonishing discovery of this film is young
child actor Brandon Walters who plays young Aboriginal boy Nullah;
not only does he have a strong gravity on screen that holds your
interest but he is a born actor, conveying a wide range of emotions
that you cannot help but feel sympathy for. However, the best thing
about this film is the fact that it got made at all; a huge sweeping
epic telling an otherwise little-known, but dramatic part of Australian
history is something to be celebrated, and Baz Luhrmann deserves
all the kudos for getting this film made.
THE
BAD: Unfortunately,
director Baz Luhrmann never quite has control of the grandness of
what he is trying to achieve, leaving a film that is in cohesive in
terms of structure, plot and theme. In terms of individual scenes,
the film works well; as a whole, it does not come close to a knockout
punch because it can never decide what that punch is. Is it the epic
love story? The treatment of Aboriginal children as part of the Stolen
Generations? The bombing of Darwin and World War II? The harsh reality
of life in the Outback (or likewise the grandeur and beauty of it)?
The dark underbelly of humanity and those things we are capable of?
All of these themes on their own are big and strong, but because they
are not dealt with the right amount of gravity, the whole enterprise
becomes two-dimensional. It does not help either that Nicole Kidman
puts in a fairly average performance as Lady Ashley. It’s true
she gets better as the film goes along, but the opening sequences
with her character border on stupidity and silliness. Ironically,
the aspect of the film designed to entice the American audience is
also its most cringeworthy; the blatant use of Aussie accents. Hugh
Jackman is okay, but he still gets to say “crickey” about
ten times. Poor Bryan Brown and David Wenham have to really belt that
accent out. It’s sad that the only way Australians sell themselves
to the world is through that damn accent and it definitely works against
the film. Overall, Baz Luhrmann could not tame this epic beast; “Australia”
is noble, but deeply flawed and the Australian Tourism Board and Film
Industry were probably not wise to hope that it would revive their
respective interests.
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