Jeremy e Neets hanno un matrimonio felice e una carriera di successo, ma le loro vite vengono sconvolte quando Simon torna e vuole confessare uno stupro commesso all'università 20 anni prima... Leggi tuttoJeremy e Neets hanno un matrimonio felice e una carriera di successo, ma le loro vite vengono sconvolte quando Simon torna e vuole confessare uno stupro commesso all'università 20 anni prima.Jeremy e Neets hanno un matrimonio felice e una carriera di successo, ma le loro vite vengono sconvolte quando Simon torna e vuole confessare uno stupro commesso all'università 20 anni prima.
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Sometimes, you don't need all the bells and whistles. In a cinematic landscape structured on money and saturated with technology, where the shadows of blockbusters are cast across just about everything, smaller, more intimate films are still able to thrive and survive, and thank the movie gods for that. While big budget extravaganzas are often enjoyable, highly affirming fun, it's good to get a little grit in your cinematic diet too, and audiences are thankfully still being served by edgy, uncompromising filmmakers with something to say.
Witness The Land, a powerful, cogently written, beautifully observed and astoundingly well performed Australian drama that tackles big, lacerating issues - family, guilt, toxic masculinity, betrayal, truth - on a miniscule budget, and still looks absolutely amazing in the process.
Jeremy (an incredibly bruising and nuanced turn from veteran character actor Steve Rodgers, who charts the emotional map here) is an apparently happily married family man. The curious listlessness and distance of his wife Neets (a bold, uninhibited, deeply sympathetic Anna Lise Phillips), however, hints that things might not be quite as rosy as they seem. When Jeremy's long absent best mate Simon (Cameron Stewart in a beautifully slow burning performance) arrives for a visit, however, the fissures in Jeremy's seemingly mundane suburban existence are slowly, grindingly ripped wide open.
Written with refreshing naturalism, emotional acuity, and true authenticity by leading men Steve Rodgers and Cameron Stewart, and directed with a sense of real visual poetry by acclaimed photographer and first time feature director Ingvar Kenne, The Land is a staggering slow burn of a film. It draws you in with its languidly beautiful imagery and relatable, likeable characters, and then agonisingly turns the screws, gradually and with great control revealing that none of them are quite who they appear to be.
Skeletons are dragged out of closets, alcohol unlocks secrets and provokes buried emotions, and we eventually realise that seemingly nice, normal people are occasionally capable of horrendous acts.
Astoundingly well directed, written and acted, The Land is a broiling, seething powerhouse of a film.
Witness The Land, a powerful, cogently written, beautifully observed and astoundingly well performed Australian drama that tackles big, lacerating issues - family, guilt, toxic masculinity, betrayal, truth - on a miniscule budget, and still looks absolutely amazing in the process.
Jeremy (an incredibly bruising and nuanced turn from veteran character actor Steve Rodgers, who charts the emotional map here) is an apparently happily married family man. The curious listlessness and distance of his wife Neets (a bold, uninhibited, deeply sympathetic Anna Lise Phillips), however, hints that things might not be quite as rosy as they seem. When Jeremy's long absent best mate Simon (Cameron Stewart in a beautifully slow burning performance) arrives for a visit, however, the fissures in Jeremy's seemingly mundane suburban existence are slowly, grindingly ripped wide open.
Written with refreshing naturalism, emotional acuity, and true authenticity by leading men Steve Rodgers and Cameron Stewart, and directed with a sense of real visual poetry by acclaimed photographer and first time feature director Ingvar Kenne, The Land is a staggering slow burn of a film. It draws you in with its languidly beautiful imagery and relatable, likeable characters, and then agonisingly turns the screws, gradually and with great control revealing that none of them are quite who they appear to be.
Skeletons are dragged out of closets, alcohol unlocks secrets and provokes buried emotions, and we eventually realise that seemingly nice, normal people are occasionally capable of horrendous acts.
Astoundingly well directed, written and acted, The Land is a broiling, seething powerhouse of a film.
Don't waste your time on this super typical Australiana film in the bush that has absolutely NO STORY, nothing really happens, it's boring, the pace is extremely slow, the color is so bland and depressing and the actors are not very good apart from the female lead.
No excuse for being a indie film, this really has NOTHING engaging, or interesting or really there isn't anything here to say.
The premise in the film has told in the synopsis - is that a guy comes back to see his mate and they talk about a rape they did 20 years ago - you would think something BIG would happen after that - nothing compelling, or thought-provoking, or emotional.
Completely unforgettable.
No excuse for being a indie film, this really has NOTHING engaging, or interesting or really there isn't anything here to say.
The premise in the film has told in the synopsis - is that a guy comes back to see his mate and they talk about a rape they did 20 years ago - you would think something BIG would happen after that - nothing compelling, or thought-provoking, or emotional.
Completely unforgettable.
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- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 33 minuti
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