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WSWS
: Arts Review
: Film
Festivals
54th Sydney Film FestivalPart 5
Australian reflections: Boxing Day, The Home Song
Stories and Lucky Miles
By Richard Phillips
24 July 2007
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This is the fifth in a series of articles on the 2007 Sydney
Film Festival, held June 8-24. Part 1
appeared on July 4, Part 2 on July
10, Part 3 on July 11 and Part
4 on July 12.
Local film critics shower almost every new Australian feature
with praise, justifying their response on the grounds that it
will encourage audiences to see and support the home-grown product.
Unfortunately few Australian features made in the past two
decades match the sensitivity and intelligence of Australian works
from the late 1970s and early 1980s, such as Picnic at Hanging
Rock, The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith, Sunday Too
Far Away, Breaker Morant or Gallipoli. There have been
some exceptions, of courseScott Hickss Shine
(1996) and Philip Noyces Rabbit-Proof Fence and The
Quiet American, both made in 2002but these only serve
to prove the rule.
Explanations from critics and filmmakers alike for the artistic
weaknesses of contemporary Australian movies range from the difficulties
in gaining finance for ambitious and intelligent projects to the
lack of courageous Australian distributors prepared to promote
local work. Another common argument is that audiences are only
interested in light-weight entertainment, with box office figures
held up as proof.
Obviously audiences want to be entertained, but there are also
growing demands for more sensitive and subversive films. In any
case, why cant movies be entertaining, as well as insightful
and challenging. The problem is that too many Australian filmmakers
fail to recognise this fact, and adapt themselves to so-called
market realities.
Such realities, however, are largely dictated by
the giant media and entertainment corporations that control the
film production industry. These conglomerates typically view ordinary
people as ignorant and are keen to contribute as much as they
can to ensuring that this is the case. Directors and writers can
only combat the pressures if they begin firstly with the understanding
that profit margins have little to do with guaranteeing artistic
truth and secondly, trusting their audiences to respond to works
that demand a thoughtful response.
Two of the three Australian features I saw at the Sydney Film
FestivalBoxing Day and The Home Song Storiesindicate
that there are some local directors attempting to produce challenging
films. While their efforts are still somewhat tentative, they
should nevertheless be acknowledged.
The best of the two was Boxing Day by Kriv Stenders,
a low budget drama about a day in the life of Chris Sykes (Richard
Green), a recovering alcoholic and former criminal who is trying
to restore ties with his family and avoid being dragged back into
the criminal underworld.

Without revealing too much about the plot, it is the day after
Christmas and Sykes is serving out the remainder of a prison sentence
in a sparsely furnished suburban home, being visited each day
by a probation officer. He has invited his deceased brothers
ex-wife, Donna (Tammy Anderson), and their daughter Brooke (Misty
Sparrow) for lunch. Donnas latest boy friend Dave (Syd Brisbane)
comes along.
Just before they arrive, Owen (Stuart Clark), a friend from
Chriss criminal past, arrives with a stupid and dangerous
proposal that the house be used to hide drugs. Chris rejects the
deal. Owen eventually leaves, but not before accusing Dave of
being a pedophile and precipitating an emotional and potentially
fatal crisis in the family.
Stenders is an audacious local filmmaker and one of a handful
exploring aspects of life for urban Aborigines. Stenderss
skilled use of non-professional actors, light-weight digital cameras
and editing equipment, and dramatic improvisation is particularly
effective.
Boxing Day was assisted by Aboriginal Prison Offenders
Support Services and produced quickly on a shoe-string budgetabout
$175,000. The film has some technical and dramatic rough edges,
but these are secondary when compared with the authenticity and
emotional intensity the film generates.
Stenders provides another important demonstration that powerful
work can be made with few resources. Hopefully Boxing Day
will get a theatrical release in Australia and elsewhere (see
interview).
The Home Song Stories is by writer and director Tony
Ayres. It explores the difficulties Ayres and his family, in particular
his mother, encountered as Chinese immigrants to Australia in
the early 1970s. The story is told in flashback form, from the
authors standpoint and as a young boy.

Rose Hong (Joan Chen), a former Shanghai nightclub singer with
two childrenTom (Joel Lok) and May (Irene Chen)falls
in love and marries Bill (Steven Vidler), an Australian sailor
visiting China. She and her children migrate to Australia, but
the marriage quickly falls apart. Bill is away with the navy for
lengthy periods, and his mother Norma disapproves of the beautiful
and vivacious woman who refuses to conform to Australian suburban
life.
Relations with Bills mother eventually become impossible,
so Rose takes her children and moves out. Over the next seven
years she becomes involved in a series of short-lived romances.
Rose tells her children that each new lover is their uncle.
The most enduring but emotionally difficult of these affairs
is with Joe, a Chinese cook in a restaurant where Rose has been
working. Joe, however, is much younger than the highly-strung
Rose and eventually finds himself attracted to May, Roses
daughter.
Rose begins to drink heavily and falls into a spiral of despair,
making life traumatic for the children as they watch their mothers
increasingly erratic and self-destructive behaviour.
Ayress movie has some affecting moments and Joan Chens
performance as Rose is particularly strong. Steven Vidler, as
kind-hearted Bill, and Kerry Walker, as Bills mother Norma,
struggle with their roles, but this is not their fault; they are
simply not given enough to work with. Bills character is
under-developed and bland and Norma is a bit cartoonish.
Some critics have described The Home Song Stories as
self-indulgent, comparing it with television family
dramas. This is unfair. Ayres is not a particularly ground-breaking
director, but the story of his mothers life in Australia
examines many of the cultural and emotional difficulties encountered
by thousands of newly arrived immigrants, issues that are largely
ignored by Australias mainstream entertainment industry.
It deserves to be seen by wider audiences.
The weakest of the Australian features that I saw was Lucky
Miles, a comedy/road movie written and directed by Michael
James Rowland about asylum-seekers.
Set in 1990, the movie, which is an amalgam of several true
stories, follows the plight of a group of asylum seekers, from
Cambodia and Iraq, who are smuggled into Australia by Indonesian
fishermen. The men are put ashore on the desert coastline of north-western
Australiathousands of kilometres from any sizeable city.

The mainly young men have no idea where they are or the dangers
they face. Welcome to paradise, the fisherman cynically
shouts as he dumps the men on the shore and tells them that a
local bus to Perth, the Western Australian capital, is on the
other side of the sand dunes. The movie follows their desperate
efforts to find a way out of the desert and hopefully to Perth
and a better life.
Lucky Miles is not a cynical film and its characters
puncture the image of refugees painted by the tabloid media. Likewise,
those sent to find the refugees are humane and provide some whimsical
moments. The Australian desert scenes are visually spectacular
and the naïve and sometimes ingenious efforts of the refugees
to find their way to civilisation are interesting. Overall, though,
Lucky Miles never really succeeds because it lacks the
tragicomedy pathos and depth this sort of movie requires and background
on why asylum seekers are forced to risk their lives and come
to Australia in the first place is rather limited.
By setting his film in 1990 Rowland, moreover, avoids any comment
on todays realitythat the greatest danger facing asylum
seekers entering the country is not the harsh desert conditions,
but the Howard governments repressive and anti-democratic
laws, which treat anyone seeking refugee status as a virtual criminal.
This legislation, which was first introduced by the Keating
Labor government in 1992 and violates international human rights
laws, has seen the mandatory detention of hundreds of men, women
and children in soul-destroying immigration prison camps for years
at a time. The prisons are located not only in isolated deserts,
but in offshore islands in the South Pacific, thousands of kilometres
away.
Lucky Miles certainly attempts to sensitise its audience
to some of the problems facing refugees trying to enter Australia.
Its primary weakness is that it only tells half the story.
See Also:
Sydney Film Festival
"I'm interested in a documentary and fiction hybrid"
: filmmaker Kriv Stenders speaks with WSWS
[24 July 2007]
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