Opening with one man being hit by a train whilst another is diagnosed with testicular cancer, you'd be surprised to find that what follows is actually a love story. Nick, who is trying to live a normal life after being told he has cancer, ends up meeting Meryl, the only witness to the tragic train accident. Instantly drawn to .. Read more
| Starring | Justine Clarke, William McInnes, Anthony Hayes, Lisa Flanagan |
|---|---|
| Director | Sarah Watt |
| Genres | Drama |
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Opening with one man being hit by a train whilst another is diagnosed with testicular cancer, you'd be surprised to find that what follows is actually a love story. Nick, who is trying to live a normal life after being told he has cancer, ends up meeting Meryl, the only witness to the tragic train accident. Instantly drawn to one another the two share their experiences of life and death whilst their family and friends suffer their own personal crises.
| Starring | Justine Clarke, William McInnes, Anthony Hayes, Lisa Flanagan |
|---|---|
| Director | Sarah Watt |
| Studio | PALISADES TARTAN |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 40 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Drama |
| Language | DVD: English |
| Released | DVD: 29 Jan 2007 Production year: 2005 |
| Format | DVD |
All is not well in the Australian suburbs. Nervy thirtysomething Meryl (Justine Clarke) imagines disasters at every... read more on Time Out
Handled with wry humour, understated poignancy and some very good performances
I loved this clever LOCAL film, full of mature characters and visual treats.There is an almost Buddhist quality to the insights revealed. Life is like it is and we have to deal with it with compassion. Throughout, there were constant images of beauty along with the pain and grot. The ensemble acting was uniformly delightful and McInnes gave the performance of his life.But they were all great. Justine Clark was so dishily funny and down to earth, such an expressive face as she delivers her so clumsily real lines.The drawings and animation add so much to the story and fabulous fast,montages carry an extra charge.This is what the big blockbusters cant do- deliver stories that talk to the locals. The humour is so laconic and ironic- it reflects an Australian's Australia.It's a film full of witty sideways glances.
I loved this clever LOCAL film, full of mature characters and visual treats.There is an almost Buddhist quality to the insights revealed. Life is like it is and we have to deal with it with compassion. Throughout, there were constant images of beauty along with the pain and grot. The ensemble acting was uniformly delightful and McInnes gave the performance of his life.But they were all great. Justine Clark was so dishily funny and down to earth, such an expressive face as she delivers her so clumsily real lines.The drawings and animation add so much to the story and fabulous fast,montages carry an extra charge.This is what the big blockbusters cant do- deliver stories that talk to the locals. The humour is so laconic and ironic- it reflects an Australian's Australia.It's a film full of witty sideways glances.
A British-South African film has won the illustrious People's Choice award at the Toronto Film Festival. Tsotsi, directed by British-born director Gavin Hood, is about a Johannesburg gangster, and also won best film at the Edinburgh festival last month. The winner of the People's Choice award often fares well at the Oscars, with previous winners including Life Is Beautiful, American Beauty and Chariots Of Fire. Just last year the award went to Hotel Rwanda, and saw leading actors Don Cheadle... Read more