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IMDbPro

In a Savage Land

  • 1999
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 55m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
603
YOUR RATING
In a Savage Land (1999)
AdventureDrama

Two married anthropologists go to an island off of Papua New Guinea for field research.Two married anthropologists go to an island off of Papua New Guinea for field research.Two married anthropologists go to an island off of Papua New Guinea for field research.

  • Director
    • Bill Bennett
  • Writers
    • Bill Bennett
    • Jennifer Cluff
  • Stars
    • Rufus Sewell
    • Martin Donovan
    • Maya Stange
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    603
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Bill Bennett
    • Writers
      • Bill Bennett
      • Jennifer Cluff
    • Stars
      • Rufus Sewell
      • Martin Donovan
      • Maya Stange
    • 9User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 7 wins & 7 nominations total

    Photos5

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    Top cast47

    Edit
    Rufus Sewell
    Rufus Sewell
    • Mick Carpenter
    Martin Donovan
    Martin Donovan
    • Dr. Phillip Spence
    Maya Stange
    Maya Stange
    • Evelyn Spence
    Max Cullen
    Max Cullen
    • Douglas Stevens
    John Howard
    John Howard
    • Rev Macgregor
    Andrew S. Gilbert
    • Gerry
    Marshall Napier
    Marshall Napier
    • Sir Geoffrey Hallerton
    Susan Lyons
    • Helen Stevens
    Don Barker
    • Barman
    Tom Moraya
    • Biui
    Rose Vaia
    • Inupi
    Chief Tokonou Tokwamula
    • Chief Tokunou
    Ivan Fabian
    • Toyodola
    Wesley Momen
    • Bartering Boy
    David Keleb
    • Bartering Boy
    David Kabeosi
    • Canoe Carver…
    George Bayagau
    • Headhunter
    Rose Silibuya
    • Rose
    • Director
      • Bill Bennett
    • Writers
      • Bill Bennett
      • Jennifer Cluff
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews9

    6.1603
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    Featured reviews

    Steve-176

    Unfortunate

    I do regret that for the last few years I haven't lived in Melbourne. Then I might have got to meet the beautiful and talented Maya Stange. She's been treading the boards in the former JeffLand and it would have been a treat to have seen her at work on the stage.

    She stars in In A Savage Land. Stange hails from Western Australia and this is her first lead role in a feature film.. But enough of that.

    This unfortunate film was made by Australia's Bill Bennet (Kiss or Kill, Spider and Rose, Two If By Sea.)

    Bill Bennet had an excellent leading lady in Maya Stange and an equally effective leading man in the fairly ubiquitous Englishman Rufus Sewell, but is hampered by an under worked script for which Bennet and his wife Jennifer, rather ill advisedly also take credit.

    In A Savage Land tells the story of a pair of anthropologists (Maya Stange and Martin Donovan) who travel to the Trobriand islands near the then New Guinea. They're fascinated by the reported avid and animated sexual habits the natives are reported to exhibit.

    Now this should start ringing alarm bells for mature cinema goers. The topic smacks of immaturity and shallowness, not necessarily, but we've seen cheap, easy sex, or the promise of it, ruin plenty of films before, most recently Stanley Kubrick's Eyes Should Have Been Shut.

    Anyway off they go from England to check out the mating habits of the natives, having got married to get the job, establishing along the way some conflict between husband and wife regarding the position of an uppity, bright, modern woman who dares to have her own opinions.

    Once they get to the tropics there's some business regarding who's supposed to be having sex with who in the village. Someone becomes offended and a native commits suicide. The white wife goes native and takes up with the local white trader (Rufus Sewell).

    A cliched Australian colonial administrator (Max Cullen) and a similarly pat local evangelist (John Howard) make their pompous entries and exits and we find out almost nothing about the natives, or even the anthropologists even when the situation gets muddy and dangerous, and in spite of some spectacular scenery.

    The film was reportedly filmed in Niu Guinea under trying circumstances but there seem to be at least a dozen fades to a black screen, a sure sign of a poorly organised effort. This film that could well have been called In A Slight Script.

    It's difficult to become involved in a story with as many loose plot ends as this one, even one that stars the very promising Maya Stange.
    9MAX-78

    An epic beyond any other

    Bill Bennet's really come of age as a film maker with this masterful epic. Top notch performances from Sewell and Donovan are shadowed by the stunning Strange.

    Maya Strange may be unknown to viewers outside Australia, but through small roles in such films as 'Head On' and "McLeod's Daughters" we down in Oz have watched and waited to see her in a role which does justice to her talent. At only 24, she not only carries her own alongside Donovan and Sewell - but also carries the film itself, appearing in almost every scene.

    The script by Bennet and his wife Jennifer is layered and complex. The photography, by first time DOP Danny Ruhlmann, is exquisite.
    billf-9

    Covering too much

    Let's see, we start off with gender issues, spousal domination, economic exploitation, colonialism, church oppression, scientific oppression through cultural arrogance and nationalism. Although, engaging and great to watch the film just tries to cover too much and winds up just giving superficial attention to all these issues.

    I always have trouble with films that have an attractive lead actress, who has her hair pulled back and wears glasses when she's supposed to be dowdy or a-sexual. The different transformations of Maya Strang were a bit hard to take and the sequence where she goes native was over the top.

    I would have liked better character development and a stronger focus. That said, the film was not a waste of time and Ms Strang is actor to watch.
    9daelyn

    Fabulous

    From a former cultural anthropology student, I have to say, this movie was good from a scholastic point of view. It was like taking a vacation for two hours too. And the beautiful people, and scenery...I thoroughly enjoyed it.
    Philby-3

    Mills and Boon go troppo

    Real Anthropology is of course an impossibility - how can a human study human society objectively? Earlier this century Western scholars were under the comfortable delusion they could apply the eye of God technique (so useful for writing novels) to the study of indigenous peoples in various parts of the earth. The eye of God sees all, but the anthropologist, constrained by his or her own conditioning, saw only a partial picture, or else got it wrong entirely. Thus Margaret Mead saw free love in Samoa, where in reality there was a complicated series of taboos.

    This visually gorgeous film, made with great difficulty on location in the Trobriand Islands of New Guinea, is the kind of picture you would get if National Geographic did joint ventures with Mills and Boon. Spunky young anthropology graduate (Maya Stange) marries her handsome if rather remote Professor (Martin Donovan) and they go off to the fabled Trobriand Islands to do a year's fieldwork in the steps of the great Malinowski who described them as the Isles of Love. The Prof has the rather strange idea that he can study a matrilinear society (where kinship is determined by female descent) by talking exclusively to the men. Naturally Spunky has other ideas and soon starts to make waves. Conveniently located nearby is devastatingly handsome Trader Dick (Rufus Sewell) who soon starts displaying an interest in Spunky. Naturally things get a bit tense. Just as the plot gets a bit tedious, Force Majeure in the form of World War Two intervenes. Will Spunky find her lost love? The answer depends on which version of the film you see.

    The two anthropologists, neatly outfitted in tropical linen, make bulls in china shops look like brain surgeons. The Prof is supposed to be experienced, yet he plunks himself down in the middle of the village, completely ignoring the fact that not only can he see all through the village, the inhabitants can see him 24 hours a day also. He, or the script writers, had only to read Malinowski's diaries to appreciate the difficulties of this kind of fieldwork. Spunky on the other hand intervenes every time she comes across a local custom she doesn't like, though to her credit after causing a tragedy she comes to see the folly of her ways. Then she overreacts by going native for a while.

    The real problem with the film though is that, like Spunky and the Prof, we stay outside the native society, we do not feel with them, but observe them from a distance. The anthropologists, two implausible characters in a half-formed plot, simply do not get inside their subject. The redneck traders understand the natives better even as they exploit them. As one of the traders says, "these are the nicest people in the world and you can't believe a thing they say." That does help to explain how Margaret Mead got it so spectacularly wrong in Samoa.

    All that said, Maya Stange as Spunky holds the viewer's attention and Rufus Sewell does a nice understated Trader Dick with a somewhat indeterminate accent - Dick is mean to be American.. Max Cullen turns in a convincing portrait of a weary (and regrettably authentically racist) Australian colonial servant. The photography is as luscious as one could wish. Maybe the producers should have just made a documentary and left Messrs Mills and Boon on the shelf.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Writer-producer-director Bill Bennett said of the genesis of this project: "I became intrigued by this place [the Trobriand Islands] at university and when I started to read more about it, the whole notion of sex and freedom within a 'primitive' culture fascinated me, but my reading confirmed my suspicions that it was more complex than was perceived, with strict social and moral codes," says Bennett. "I became fascinated by the role of women and their status and power in a matrilineal society and thought it would be an interesting place to set a love story about scientists in a conventional marriage being affected by the sexual politics of the place."
    • Quotes

      [first lines]

      Evelyn Spence: I once met a man, not my husband, another man. He looked back on a life. What would you carry into the darkness? For me, I'll take the smell of a pearl shell, freshly opened, one day on a beach.

    • Connections
      Featured in In a Savage Land: Cast and Crew Interviews (2001)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 21, 1999 (Australia)
    • Country of origin
      • Australia
    • Official site
      • Beyond Films (Australia)
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • En una tierra salvaje
    • Filming locations
      • Kiriwina Island, Papua New Guinea
    • Production companies
      • Australian Film Finance Corporation (AFFC)
      • Hollywood Partners
      • Premium Movie Partnership
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 55m(115 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital

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