Three Australian drag queens are invited to play a four-week engagement at an Alice Springs hotel. Their only problem is getting there intact. Read more
| Starring | Terence Stamp, Guy Pearce, Hugo Weaving, Bill Hunter |
|---|---|
| Director | Stephan Elliott |
| Genres | Comedy, Gay/Lesbian |
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Three Australian drag queens are invited to play a four-week engagement at an Alice Springs hotel. Their only problem is getting there intact.
| Starring | Terence Stamp, Guy Pearce, Hugo Weaving, Bill Hunter |
|---|---|
| Director | Stephan Elliott |
| Studio | SONY PICTURES HOME ENTERTAINMENT |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 39 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Comedy, Gay/Lesbian |
| Language | DVD: English |
| Subtitles | DVD: None |
| Released | DVD: 22 May 2000 Production year: 1994 |
| Format | DVD |
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Brilliantly bitchy, fabulously photographed and wonderfully played, this Australian frock opera (the costumes won a well-deserved Oscar) addresses serious issues with satirical accuracy and profound insight. Tossing the niceties of sexual politics out of the window of a speeding bus, director Stephan Elliott sets about exposing the soft underbelly of the Australian male. Two drag queens and a transsexual travel across the outback in a dilapidated coach for a gig in that bastion of machismo, Alice Springs, en route finding themselves in all manner of hilarious fish-out-of-water situations. As they gaily bemuse Aborigines, bait vicious homophobes and find kindred spirits among Australia's diverse immigrant communities, they come to terms not only with their own shortcomings, but also with Australia's countless contradictions. Ingeniously cast against type, Terence Stamp is a revelation as the hard-drinking transsexual, but he's matched all the way by the versatile Hugo Weaving and the dashing Guy Pearce. Tremendous fun, with a deliciously sugar-coated message, this is the closest the cinema has come to a proper musical in years.
"...Enough to shake the kookaburras right out of the trees....[Old-fashioned] in its own outrageous, convention-flouting way..."
Being a huge fan of Guy Pearce I, naturally, wanted to see this film. However, I found myself more drawn towards the performances of the film's other two co-stars. Terence Stamp gives the performance of a lifetime as drag queen Bernadette, and Hugo Weaving (The Matrix's Agent Smith)is equally outstanding. The film follows the adventures, and mis-adventures, of the trio of 'ladies' as they make their way to an engagement halfway across Australia, on their pink bus Priscilla. The film is funny, poignant and compelling, and shows Australian film-making at its best. It certainly has my Stamp of approval.
Never having been interested in the goings on in the world of transvestites I found this both very funny and quite informative. Some of the jokes went over my head, but the bitchiness was there for all to see. It was a sad and amusing tale of the journey of three men, two of which were probably the ugliest women I've ever seen, who embark on a bus from London to Oz to entertain those in the middle of a desert. Did the editor forget to add the means of getting there? One minute they are in the UK, the next they are in Australia. That spoilt it a bit. No regrets at having watched it though.
Easy Virtue director Stephan Elliott uncovered a treasure trove of shocking historical memorabilia while shooting the period comedy in rural England - the owner of one of the stately homes he used as a location has a secret stash of priceless Hitler and Marie Antoinette items. The Aussie has sworn never to reveal which of the historic homes houses the odd collection - and the items are so well protected he doubts even a fire could destroy them. He says, "There was one place where we filmed -... Read more
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