Tag: Jacki Weaver

  • Ivan Sen’s ‘Goldstone’ on DVD/Blu-ray/digital in October

    Ivan Sen’s ‘Goldstone’ on DVD/Blu-ray/digital in October

    Goldstone - Blu-rayIvan Sen’s follow-up to Mystery Road, the critically acclaimed GOLDSTONE, is coming to Australian homes this October on all the formats you kids love. Releasing on digital on the 19 October, the DVD/Blu-ray release will follow on 26 October 2016.

    Named by us clever folks here at The Reel Bits as one of the best films of the year (so far), our five-star review said that it was “slick, darkly comic, and always thrilling. This is the best of what cinema has to offer.” Not simply begging for pull-quotes (even if it did work), it’s truly one of Sen’s (and Australia’s) most ambitious films to date.

    The film follows the story of Indigenous Detective Jay Swan (Aaron Pedersen) who arrives in the frontier town of “Goldstone” on a missing persons case and gets wrapped up in a case that is political, opening up a web of crime and corruption implicating the local Mayor, Mining Boss and Aboriginal Land Council.

    The DVD/Blu-ray itself includes commentary with Ivan Sen & Aaron Pedersen and ‘Behind the Scenes’ interviews with Ivan and the key cast, making this one of the must own packages of the year. Continue to support quality Australian art by buying a legit copy of this when it hits retailers in October. Or buy one for yourself, and another for an early Christmas present.

    Goldstone - The Reel Bits pullquote

  • SFF 2016 Review: Goldstone

    SFF 2016 Review: Goldstone

    Goldstone poster (Australia) - Designer: Carnival StudiosIvan Sen’s follow-up to Mystery Road is grander and more intensely exploratory than its predecessor, and it opens the Sydney Film Festival’s competition selection for 2016.

    Opening on a set of vintage settler photos showing the history of Chinese-Australian and Indigenous relations in the mining industry, it’s clear Ivan Sen’s GOLDSTONE is intent on laying down a much clearer political message than its predecessor. If Mystery Road was a tip of the hat to the Coen Brothers’ No Country for Old Men, then its standalone sequel is a bold examination of contemporary Aboriginal life, mining concerns and human trafficking in the guise of a genre thriller. In other words, it’s one of Sen’s (and Australia’s) most ambitious films to date.

    The fortunes of detective Jay Swan (Aaron Pedersen) have shifted somewhat, and when he is pulled over for drunk driving by local cop Josh Waters (Alex Russell), Swan is a messy shell of his former straight-edge cop. Ostensibly in town on a missing persons business, his investigations soon run him afoul of Furnace Creek mining company rep Johnny (a wormy pig of a man played with relish by David Wenham) and Goldstone’s pie-baking, eerily-smiling mayor Maureen (Jackie Weaver, only a few shades shy of Animal Kingdom‘s Smurf). Swan soon finds that the fenced-off mining concern is fronting a Chinese prostitution ring amidst a sea of corruption, forcing him to pull his life together and team up with Josh Waters.

    Sen’s massive overhead shots of the landscape, filmed on location in Queensland’s Middleton region, give the same sense of enormous and isolating scale that Mystery Road had, yet here it doesn’t quite come with the same nihilistic leanings. For Jay Swan, this is a redemption story, and to maintain the ethos of a standalone thriller, we are never entirely sure what it is Swan is atoning for. Writer/director Sen, who also acts as both the cinematographer and the composer on the film, is responsible for giving the film and the location a roaming atmosphere, one where there is a constant sense of threat around every corner. He’s not beyond a few touches of the surreal either, from a seemingly random neon-lit trailer for Pinky’s (Kate Beahan) mobile brothel, or the incongruous outback hub for the area’s collective seediness, simply known as The Ranch.

    Goldstone

    Jay Swan, like his creator, is a man who walks between two worlds. Returning to the character specifically because his star Pedersen urged him to do so, Sen explores the tensions between cultures in this film. Occasionally, the point is layered somewhat heavy handedly, but several centuries after the European invasion of Australia, a light touch is the last thing these issues need. We see multiple sides of the coin, through the patently corrupt Aboriginal land council head Tommy (Tom E. Lewis) to the intense spirituality of old Jimmy (David Gulpilil). By the time the inevitable shoot-out occurs, one that ups the ante on even Mystery Road‘s impressive crossfires, there are lingering questions that are perhaps best left for the audience to answer.

    Local cinema has struggled to comes to terms with another fine line, between what constitutes an “Australian film” and the commercial aspects of a “genre” film. GOLDSTONE is proof that it can be wholly both, without compromising an iota of either. Filled with plenty of nods to Sen’s beloved Western genre, there a few moment in this film where the stakes feel anything less than high. Slick, darkly comic, and always thrilling, this is the best of what cinema has to offer.

    2016 | Australia | DIR: Ivan Sen | WRITERS: Ivan Sen | CAST: Aaron Pedersen, Alex Russell, Jacki Weaver, David Wenham, David Gulpilil | DISTRIBUTOR: Transmission Films (AUS) | RUNNING TIME: 109 minutes | RATING: ★★★★★ (10/10)

  • Trailer Talk: Park Chan-wook’s Stoker

    Trailer Talk: Park Chan-wook’s Stoker

    Stoker - Teaser posterFox Searchlight Pictures (via iTunes Trailer)  has released the first trailer for Korean filmmaker Park Chan-wook‘s first foray into English-language film with Stoker, a thriller starring Australia’s Mia Wasikowska, Jacki Weaver and Nicole Kidman alongside Matthew Goode and Dermot Mulroney. The director of Oldboy, Thirst and Joint Security Area is a favourite of the world cinema scene, and it will be interesting to see if he can make the smooth transition to Western cinema.

    After India’s (Wasikowska’s) father dies in an auto accident, her Uncle Charlie (Goode), who she never knew existed, comes to live with her and her emotionally unstable mother Evelyn (Kidman). Soon after his arrival, she comes to suspect this mysterious, charming man has ulterior motives, but instead of feeling outrage or horror, this friendless girl becomes increasingly infatuated with him.

    At The Reel Bits, we don’t just post trailers now, we review them too. This is Trailer Talk. Check out our thoughts after viewing the trailer below.

    Trailer Talk:

    Park’s Stoker was listed as one of our most anticipated films for 2012, and this trailer confirms why we had such high hope for it. Of course, now it will be on our most anticipated for 2013, because it isn’t out until March next year. Produced for Ridley and Tony Scott’s Scott Free productions, the plot might have stepped straight out of a Gothic horror novel and that sits precisely where Park excels at bringing the creepy thrills. His Vengeance Trilogy, and in particular Oldboy, gave us insight into an unconventional family unit,  and here he brings us something closer to Alfred Hitchcock’s most gripping work. Indeed, writer Wentworth Miller recently told Collider a few years ago that Hitchcock’s Shadow of a Doubt was the “jumping off point” for Stoker. “So, that’s where we begin, and then we take it in a very, very different direction”.

    He goes on to say that the name “Stoker” consciously evokes Dracula author Bram Stoker, solidifying the Gothic vibe of the piece. Indeed, early in the production of the film, there were rumours that this would be an actual vampire film. However, the trailer shows a complex narrative between the women impacted on either side by the presence of “Uncle Charlie”, with Australian ex-pats clearly inexplicably drawn to psychopaths in Park Chan-wook films.

    About the only fault of this trailer is that it might be giving away too much, with a few bodies and seemingly key moments jumping out for those cluey enough to piece it all together. This release can’t come fast enough.

    Bits Rating: ★★★★½

  • Trailer for David O. Russell’s The Silver Linings Playbook Arrives

    Trailer for David O. Russell’s The Silver Linings Playbook Arrives

    The Silver Linings PlaybookYahoo! Movies has released the first trailer for The Silver Linings Playbook, David O. Russell’s adaptation of Matthew Quick’s novel.

    We last saw Russell with the Oscar-winning The Fighter in 2010. This latest film stars Bradley Cooper, Jennifer Lawrence, Jacki Weaver, Chris Tucker, Julia Stiles and Robert De Niro.

    Synopsis: Pat Peoples (Bradley Cooper) is a man always trying to look on the bright side of life – the title of the story takes it’s name from the expression that “every cloud has a silver lining.” Released from the hospital after losing his wife to another man, Pat believes this age-old adage is just the ticket to trying to win her back and get his life on track. Trying to remain resolutely undiscouraged, Pat moves back in with his parents and devotes himself entirely to becoming the man his wife always wanted him to be. But it’s an uphill battle. Until Pat meets Tiffany (Jennifer Lawrence), a beautiful young woman whose life also has not turned out the way she wanted. Together, the couple will try and navigate through their lives and stay true to who they are, always just one adventure away from a unique friendship, and possibly even love.

    The Silver Linings Playbook is released on 29 November 2012 from Roadshow.