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Signs of life
Two new Australian films: Look Both Ways and Little
Fish
By Richard Phillips
17 October 2005
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Two recent Australian filmsLook Both Ways and
Little Fishhave attracted some local critical acclaim
and larger than usual audiences. Both movies, while not flawless,
are humane and intelligent works. They constitute an improvement
on the last few years of uninspiring commercial features produced
in Australia.
Look Both Ways, a debut feature written and directed
by Sarah Watt, won the Discovery Award prizewinner at the recent
Toronto International Film Festival. Watts multi-faceted
film has obvious warmth and appeal, although this may appear to
be a contradiction, given that the movies central subject
matter is death and grieving. The 100-minute multi-character movie
examines how ordinary people come to terms with mortality.
Watts film traces the intersecting paths of a small group
of individualsa news photographer, an artist, a train driver,
a journalist, an editor and otherswho are brought together
by a fatal rail accident on an especially hot weekend in an Australian
city.
Nick (William McInness), the photographer and the films
principal character, has just been told that he has cancer but
has to wait until the following Monday before he receives a more
detailed prognosis. Meryl (Justine Clark), an illustrator and
artist, is returning home from her fathers funeral. On the
way back to her small studio apartment, she witnesses the death
of a pedestrian who is killed by a passing train.
Nick is assigned to cover the tragic story and meets Meryl.
While both are deeply affected by the tragedy, they are preoccupied
with their own mortality. Nick visualises cancer spreading through
his body; Meryl sees catastrophes around every corner. Watt, a
veteran short film animator, innovatively illustrates these imaginings
through stop-frame photography, animations and other visual techniques.
Nick and Meryl accidentally meet the next day. There is an
obvious chemistry between them and they sleep together that night.
Look Both Ways then follows their awkward but affecting
romance, while intercutting back and forth between the dilemmas
facing the films other characters: Andy (Anthony Hayes),
an ambitious young journalist trying to deal with a failed marriage
and his long-suffering girlfriend who has just discovered that
shes pregnant; the distraught train driver who accidentally
killed the pedestrian; and the dead pedestrians wife and
grieving family.
Watt skillfully reconciles these apparently disparate strands,
and although the film probably has too many characters and plot
lines, she has an obvious depth of feeling and empathy for her
characters that resonates throughout the film. In fact, one feels
that all the protagonists are drawn from life and that we somehow
know them.
Justine Clark as Meryl is particularly appealing and perfectly
captures her characters strange combination of constant
premonitions, quirky humour and perceptive personal insights.
William McInness self-deprecating humour and generally deadpan
delivery, even as he is worrying about his own cancer, is effective
and entirely believable.
This is not a major work. But its underlying messagethat
death, grieving and day-to-day concerns about mortality should
be openly discussed and understood as part of human existenceis
obviously an important subject for artistic exploration.
Perhaps Watts could have attempted to relate her characters
preoccupation with death and destruction to the current political
climate? In any case, the movies appeal is that these questions
are examined from the standpoint of ordinary, complex human beings,
not larger-than-life caricatures, and not used to bolster religious
belief or some hope in an afterlife.
Overall, Look Both Ways is a healthy and genuinely optimistic
work. Although not deeply-probing, it deserves a wide audience.
A positive change
Little Fish, written by Jacquelin Perske and directed
by Rowan Woods, examines the life of Tracy Heart (Cate Blanchett),
a 32-year-old working class woman and former heroin addict from
Cabramatta, a suburb in western Sydney with a large Vietnamese
immigrant population.
Woods is obviously not the first director to deal with the
problems of suburban crime, drug abuse and its pitiless subculture,
but his approach is compassionate and a positive departure from
previous work.
His first feature, The Boys (1998), is a nihilistic
and deeply pessimistic work about three brothers from the western
Sydney suburbs. One of the brothers has just been released from
prison and the three men spend a day of drinking and drug taking
before committing a brutal murder of a young woman. Elements of
the film, which was acclaimed by local critics, indicate a fascination
for criminal elements (see Two
Australian films).
By contrast, Little Fish attempts to carefully explore
and dramatise some of the underlying factors behind drug addiction
and, unlike many contemporary features, does not sensationalise
the issue.
Tracy, who lives with her single mother Janelle (Noni Hazelhurst),
manages a small suburban video rental store. She has applied for
a bank loan to become a partner in the business and expand it
into an Internet café. With the assistance of her mother
and a girlfriend, who try to keep her away from her old associates,
Tracy has not used heroin for four years. But the social and economic
pressures of the past are ever-present and seem to be closing
in.
Unknown to her mother, Tracy still maintains a friendship with
Lionel Dawson (Hugo Weaving), her mothers former boyfriend
and the individual who first introduced her to hard drugs. Dawson,
a former professional football star, has been unable to kick his
habit and is sexually involved with a local crime boss (Sam Neill),
who supplies him with heroin.
Jonny (Dustin Nguyen), Tracys ex-boyfriend and also a
drug user, has just returned to Sydney after four years in Canada
where his family sent him to try and end his drug taking. He wants
to reestablish his relationship with Tracy and claims to have
worked as a stockbroker in Canada and to be preparing to take
up a job with a Sydney broking firm. At the same time Ray (Martin
Henderson), Tracys disabled brother and a drug user, is
attempting to set up a drug-peddling partnership with Jonny. The
two young men start organising a scheme with another small time
criminal.
Tracys attempts to secure a business loan ultimately
failthe banks are not prepared to ignore her criminal record
and bad credit rating. Having previously told the video store
manager and her friends that the money had been approved, she
is thrown into crisis. Increasingly desperate and confused, she
resumes her relationship with Jonny and is drawn into his and
Rays dreams of a lucrative drug deal.
Blanchett gives an energetic and sincere performance, but the
strongest work is by Hugo Weaving as the former football star.
Weaving captures the footballers tragic self-pitying bitterness.
Once healthy, rich and famous, he now lives in a threadbare apartment,
forced to sell his sporting trophies to feed his drug habit.
Without revealing Little Fishs conclusion, the
drug deal is a catastrophe but Tracy, Ray and Jonny somehow extricate
themselves from a bloody denouement. The film ends on a vaguely
optimistic note with the three characters swimming at a local
surf beach as dawn breaks and Tracy visually reminiscing her childhood
innocence. This is rather simplistic and unconvincing, because
it glosses over the tough future they now face.
Woods tends to view life in working class suburbs as dark and
mysterious, almost alien, and tries to give his settings an enigmatic
appearance, with obtuse camera angles and other techniques. These
atmospherics become a distraction. More effort could have been
productively expended on character development. Weaving is compelling
precisely because his ex-footballer character is the most complex
figure in the movie.
Despite this and other limitations, Little Fish has
some insightful and unsettling moments. Woods demonstrates a degree
of understanding and real concern for his characters.
The movie, notwithstanding its positive ending,
makes clear that recovering working class addicts confront almost
insurmountable odds. In the absence of ongoing medical treatment
and counseling, the only real support they have is from immediate
family and friends. And, if this is not available, the task becomes
virtually impossible, because the underlying social and economic
dynamics that engendered the addiction in the first place, remain.
Some local film critics have responded to Look Both Ways
and Little Fish with claims that they constitute a renaissance
of Australian cinema. This reaction is somewhat exaggerated
and primarily driven by concerns about the parlous state of the
Australian feature film industry, whose 12 features last year
only earned a total of $11.9 million, the worst result for the
industry since 1978.
While Little Fish and Look Both Ways will not
single handedly overcome the problems facing the local film industry,
they do indicate that there are some Australian directors prepared
to go against the grain of the prevailing commercial moviemaking
culture. These tentative steps should be encouraged.
See Also:
Australian film industry:
the futility of calls for cultural protection
[9 December 2003]
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