Hotel Coolgardie
- 2016
- 1h 23min
NOTE IMDb
6,8/10
1,5 k
MA NOTE
Sur une autoroute poussiéreuse entre la ville la plus isolée d'Australie et sa plus grande mine d'or se trouve Coolgardie - où l'arrivée tous les trois mois d'une nouvelle paire de routards ... Tout lireSur une autoroute poussiéreuse entre la ville la plus isolée d'Australie et sa plus grande mine d'or se trouve Coolgardie - où l'arrivée tous les trois mois d'une nouvelle paire de routards étrangers est un événement très attendu.Sur une autoroute poussiéreuse entre la ville la plus isolée d'Australie et sa plus grande mine d'or se trouve Coolgardie - où l'arrivée tous les trois mois d'une nouvelle paire de routards étrangers est un événement très attendu.
- Récompenses
- 1 victoire et 6 nominations au total
6,81.5K
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Spot on documentary / A MUST WATCH
It is an absolute must watch!
As a female Australian who has worked as a bar maid and also grown up exposed to country towns (or just those 'typical' all Australian communities, because it's not just rural areas men/women/employers have this mindset which sadly is representing Australia so poorly) i can confirm this is a very accurate portrayal. Well Done!
Warning: Prepare yourself to go through all the emotions like I did when i watched it. This film really brought to light so many things that are wrong in our culture, many of which are so desperately needing to be exposed off and talked about.
I look forward to seeing more documentary's like this one, one highlighting the gambling culture here would be something id love to see from these same film makers if possible.
As a female Australian who has worked as a bar maid and also grown up exposed to country towns (or just those 'typical' all Australian communities, because it's not just rural areas men/women/employers have this mindset which sadly is representing Australia so poorly) i can confirm this is a very accurate portrayal. Well Done!
Warning: Prepare yourself to go through all the emotions like I did when i watched it. This film really brought to light so many things that are wrong in our culture, many of which are so desperately needing to be exposed off and talked about.
I look forward to seeing more documentary's like this one, one highlighting the gambling culture here would be something id love to see from these same film makers if possible.
Fly on the wall documentary shows real life in Australia's outback and how it exploits backpacking labour
Very good filming where you forget there is a camera and it is quite clear the people in this documentary forgot the camera quickly as well.
It shows a rough brutal way that a hotel owner treats temporary employees and how a small mining town looks forward to greeting new staff.
Some characters come off ok, some clearly are lonely and welcome the chance to get to know new faces and take a trip with them to relieve the boredom of the town but others clearly have other ideas.
Shocking to see how an employer reacts to illness, to know what I mean watch the movie.
It shows a rough brutal way that a hotel owner treats temporary employees and how a small mining town looks forward to greeting new staff.
Some characters come off ok, some clearly are lonely and welcome the chance to get to know new faces and take a trip with them to relieve the boredom of the town but others clearly have other ideas.
Shocking to see how an employer reacts to illness, to know what I mean watch the movie.
A fish out of water story in the Australian outback
Hotel Coolgardie which is directed, shot and edited by Pete Gleeson is a fish out of water tale which shines a light on the attitudes of Australian men albeit in the Australian outback. Two young Finnish girls try their luck when they take a job working as barmaids at a pub called Hotel Denver City, in a remote mining town named Coolgardie, in the Australian outback. Although they are forewarned by the female recruiting agent in Perth that they are going to a somewhat isolated mining town and will be dealing with a lot of male attention, Lina and Stephanie take the job regardless, out of economic necessity.
Like clockwork, every quarter a new batch of girls arrive to work the bar at Hotel Denver City. Lina and Stephanie are replacing Becky and Clio who are wrapping up their three month contract. Interviews with the male regulars of Hotel Denver City reveal that they view the girls as the only game in town, and their is a race to bed them. Their employer, Pete, announces their pending arrival, on the sandwich board outside the bar with the words, "New Girls Tonite". The film documents Lina and Stephanie's attempts to see through their contract and hold it together while they fend off the unrelenting male attention. Gleeson creates intimate portraits of these two young women struggling to maintain their dignity in a sexually charged atmosphere. You not only feel their discomfort and alienation but are worried about their mental health. They are subjected to rude and insulting language and behaviour not just from the blokes but from their boss, Pete, who does nothing to stop it but adds insult to injury by belittling them in public. I was thankful for the presence of John, aka "The Canman", one of the few nice male characters in the film, who presents a different male perspective. I was touched by John's story and his benevolence and friendship with Lina and Stephanie. The dramatic tension in the film doesn't let up and if you want to find out what happens to Lina and Stephanie, well, you've got to see the documentary.
I found Hotel Coolgardie a fascinating documentary. Gleeson has done an excellent job editing his film as it moves fluidly between Lina and Stephanie allowing for two different perspectives, and by interspersing the entire film with day and night shots of Coolgardie and the Australian outback which situates their story in a cultural context. The film not only shines a light on shared attitudes prevalent among Australian men albeit in the Australian outback, but, is a metaphor for the outsider, the migrant, who far away from home, most often alone, must learn an unfamiliar language and navigate and adapt to new cultural contexts to eke out a precarious economic living.
Like clockwork, every quarter a new batch of girls arrive to work the bar at Hotel Denver City. Lina and Stephanie are replacing Becky and Clio who are wrapping up their three month contract. Interviews with the male regulars of Hotel Denver City reveal that they view the girls as the only game in town, and their is a race to bed them. Their employer, Pete, announces their pending arrival, on the sandwich board outside the bar with the words, "New Girls Tonite". The film documents Lina and Stephanie's attempts to see through their contract and hold it together while they fend off the unrelenting male attention. Gleeson creates intimate portraits of these two young women struggling to maintain their dignity in a sexually charged atmosphere. You not only feel their discomfort and alienation but are worried about their mental health. They are subjected to rude and insulting language and behaviour not just from the blokes but from their boss, Pete, who does nothing to stop it but adds insult to injury by belittling them in public. I was thankful for the presence of John, aka "The Canman", one of the few nice male characters in the film, who presents a different male perspective. I was touched by John's story and his benevolence and friendship with Lina and Stephanie. The dramatic tension in the film doesn't let up and if you want to find out what happens to Lina and Stephanie, well, you've got to see the documentary.
I found Hotel Coolgardie a fascinating documentary. Gleeson has done an excellent job editing his film as it moves fluidly between Lina and Stephanie allowing for two different perspectives, and by interspersing the entire film with day and night shots of Coolgardie and the Australian outback which situates their story in a cultural context. The film not only shines a light on shared attitudes prevalent among Australian men albeit in the Australian outback, but, is a metaphor for the outsider, the migrant, who far away from home, most often alone, must learn an unfamiliar language and navigate and adapt to new cultural contexts to eke out a precarious economic living.
Not sure why this got any bad reviews
I found it fascinating and wholesome, the canman made it for me, what a legend, love that guy.
Basically 2 respectable Finnish girls get 3 months works in a rough Australian bar, easy watching and would love to see how the next girls get in.
RIP Canman, little piece of my heart goes with you I found it fascinating and wholesome, the canman made it for me, what a legend, love that guy.
Basically 2 respectable Finnish girls get 3 months works in a rough Australian bar, easy watching and would love to see how the next girls get in.
RIP Canman, little piece of my heart goes with you I recommend.
Basically 2 respectable Finnish girls get 3 months works in a rough Australian bar, easy watching and would love to see how the next girls get in.
RIP Canman, little piece of my heart goes with you I found it fascinating and wholesome, the canman made it for me, what a legend, love that guy.
Basically 2 respectable Finnish girls get 3 months works in a rough Australian bar, easy watching and would love to see how the next girls get in.
RIP Canman, little piece of my heart goes with you I recommend.
Gruesome yet rivetting
Oz band Men At Work once wrote a song about a land down under, "where women glow and men plunder". They obviously weren't singing about Coolgardie, where the women are every bit as vile and repugnant as the men. The last time I heard the phrase "bar girl' was back in the 70s in a town in a third-world country, and even back then the term was considered derogatory. But it is still gleefully used by a bar called The Swan in Coolgardie, in the new millennium! The reason why I watched this till the end (and might watch again) is because of my fascination with rural Australia, facets of which were well served by movies like Priscilla, Queen of the Desert and the remake of Wake in Fright. So yes, I found this movie downright unpleasant, yet fascinating to watch, if only to tell myself how lucky I am not to be living there :) !!
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe documentary's filmmaker first discovered the outback hotel about fifteen years prior to the doc debuting. He was travelling through the country town and happened to be there at the time of a changeover between female temporary barmaid bartenders where two new ones were replacing two who were leaving after their three month tenure.
- ConnexionsReferenced in The Royal Hotel (2023)
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- How long is Hotel Coolgardie?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Montant brut mondial
- 69 057 $US
- Durée
- 1h 23min(83 min)
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1
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