IMDb RATING
6.4/10
1.3K
YOUR RATING
A British man with a peculiar curse goes on a low-rent bus tour in Australia.A British man with a peculiar curse goes on a low-rent bus tour in Australia.A British man with a peculiar curse goes on a low-rent bus tour in Australia.
- Awards
- 6 wins & 8 nominations
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe head producer on this picture was Al Clark who had previously produced another fish-out-of-water outback Australia road movie - the classic Australian film 'The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert' (1994) - about four years earlier.
- ConnectionsFeatured in South Australian Film Corporation 40th Anniversary Showreel (2012)
- SoundtracksRaindrops
Performed by Alan Brough
Featured review
The storyline starts with an British industrial chemist whose wife dies in unusual circumstances and then finds his life surrounded by strange disasters. The strangest is winning a ticket to Australia on a el cheapo bus tour through the outback with pack of 70's style Ocker stereotypes and token Asian.
As an Australian watching this film, my skin crawled all the way through as an archetypal English gent (Linus Roache) reserved, emotionally constipated and good looking in the Hugh Grant style learns how to let go and release the creative spirit with the help of Grace(Danielle Cormack), an independent woman on the run from her partner, a drug dealing doctor.
With plenty of pacey set pieces you could be fooled into thinking that something is happening it isn't, and the characters go nowhere in particular. A little like the aborted bus trip that drives(pun intended) the short storyline.
John Polson, noted for his remarkable performances as an actor in films such as `The Boys' and `Idiot Box' does a flip turn directing this embarrassing, tepid affair that will soon forgotten. The comedy was cheap and nasty and was worsened by the suspect use of Choung Dao as the `silent Asian' to shore up a flimsy script suffering from a drought of intellect and humour.
Score:
Puke factor: 4/5
Comedy factor: 1/5 (if you're over 55)
Value: 0/5
As an Australian watching this film, my skin crawled all the way through as an archetypal English gent (Linus Roache) reserved, emotionally constipated and good looking in the Hugh Grant style learns how to let go and release the creative spirit with the help of Grace(Danielle Cormack), an independent woman on the run from her partner, a drug dealing doctor.
With plenty of pacey set pieces you could be fooled into thinking that something is happening it isn't, and the characters go nowhere in particular. A little like the aborted bus trip that drives(pun intended) the short storyline.
John Polson, noted for his remarkable performances as an actor in films such as `The Boys' and `Idiot Box' does a flip turn directing this embarrassing, tepid affair that will soon forgotten. The comedy was cheap and nasty and was worsened by the suspect use of Choung Dao as the `silent Asian' to shore up a flimsy script suffering from a drought of intellect and humour.
Score:
Puke factor: 4/5
Comedy factor: 1/5 (if you're over 55)
Value: 0/5
- paul_imseih
- Sep 10, 1999
- Permalink
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Details
- Runtime1 hour 31 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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