IMDb RATING
6.8/10
1.8K
YOUR RATING
An imaginative and somewhat disturbed young girl fantasizes about evil creatures and other oddities to mask her insecurities while growing up in rural Australia.An imaginative and somewhat disturbed young girl fantasizes about evil creatures and other oddities to mask her insecurities while growing up in rural Australia.An imaginative and somewhat disturbed young girl fantasizes about evil creatures and other oddities to mask her insecurities while growing up in rural Australia.
- Awards
- 2 wins & 2 nominations total
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Featured reviews
Unique, superb and rare period film
As a film lover who immigrated to Australia, I've invested a fair bit of effort in seeking out Aussie films that aren't well known abroad, from the popular like 'The Castle' and 'Storm Boy' to Ozploitation like 'Razorback' and 'Next of Kin' to cult classics like 'Wake in Fright' and 'Bad Boy Bubby'. Yet after many years here, I'd never heard of 'Celia' until I saw it pop up on the Arrow site. What a glorious gem to uncover!
It's almost best to go into this film knowing nothing, because it's an extremely difficult one to classify. While there are horror elements, it's most definitely not a horror film. It's probably best described as a period coming of age drama with fantasy elements. But it's not a kids' film-it's very dark.
It's also very hard to pin a date on this film, as it looks like it could have been shot in the '70s or last year, a testament to the quality of the director and crew. The photography, the art direction, the writing and acting are all top shelf. Serious craft here.
I won't give away the story, other than the top-line: It's about a girl named Celia with an active imagination growing up in fifties Cold War Australia and the politics of the time play into the general anxiety of the film.
All you really need to know is, it's a well-crafted film and completely entrancing. It's playful and joyful and sad and dark. The more films I watch, the more I appreciate films that are unlike any other film out there. This is one of them.
It's almost best to go into this film knowing nothing, because it's an extremely difficult one to classify. While there are horror elements, it's most definitely not a horror film. It's probably best described as a period coming of age drama with fantasy elements. But it's not a kids' film-it's very dark.
It's also very hard to pin a date on this film, as it looks like it could have been shot in the '70s or last year, a testament to the quality of the director and crew. The photography, the art direction, the writing and acting are all top shelf. Serious craft here.
I won't give away the story, other than the top-line: It's about a girl named Celia with an active imagination growing up in fifties Cold War Australia and the politics of the time play into the general anxiety of the film.
All you really need to know is, it's a well-crafted film and completely entrancing. It's playful and joyful and sad and dark. The more films I watch, the more I appreciate films that are unlike any other film out there. This is one of them.
Growing up in Australia in the 50's
Celia is a 9 year old girl with a lot of imagination. She lives with her family in South Australia in the fifties. She has a strong will, lots of charm and wit. Her family are communists, which makes them kind of outcasts in the society, and Celia has to fight mobbing schoolmates as well as discriminating teachers. She manages to do that very well. All this gives a rather frank and funny description of childhood problems, and Rebecca Smart plays her part extremely well. But Celia is not just a charming kid - when she hates, she really hates. And when she fantasizes about mysterious evil animals, she can't quite distinguish fantasy from reality. Which might seem rather normal, but Celia lives in a house, where a loaded gun is available... This movie is very entertaining, giving a varied picture of growing-up - and one can really feel the emotions and confusions, which is a part of being nine years old. At times the film becomes perhaps a bit too confusing - it can be quite difficult to follow the girls vivid imagination. But I'll guess, you have the same problem in the real world...
Lord of the Flies for girls
It is with a heavy heart that I note Celia, possibly my favourite film, is now being marketed with a tacky subtitle. This film is comparable to Jane Campion's work and is anything but a straight horror film, with a subtle characterisation and a compassionate yet unsentimental picture of childhood not generally associated with that genre. The narrative viewpoint is well sustained, with the grownup world of barbecues, blacklists, and affairs observed from a child's angle. The horror in question is in Celia's imagination, which, like that of all children, plays out the stresses of her own family and her culture. Various plagues - literal and metaphoric - impinge on her world, from myxomatosis to communism. Fans of blood and gore will be disappointed. The film is an unhurried portrait of 50s Australia, the pressure to conform, childhood, death. Its climax is sharp and bloody but logical; as is the lightness of the ending. As a touchstone, think of the daughter in the Piano, with her outrageous storybook lies, her spontaneity, her hurt rebellion, and her ultimate childishness. Just don't think Carrie. This is gem of a film, and let's face it, Hollywood churns out a lot of disappointing ones. As soon as you see the opening titles with Rebecca Smart's expressive face glancing all around her, while the theme music plays, you'll realise you're in the hands of a very talented director.
A very strange film
A very strange film that has been included in the, All the Haunts be Ours, compendium of 'folk horror' which is really what this is. There is and plenty that looks like a children film but it clearly is not that right and even at the early there are moments of 'horror'. I understand that in the video store people wanted to make clear that 'children' should not be allowed and then if as people are hope it will be gore and sex and maybe vampires, there is another problem. So lets just face this that children are in the film and realise that they do not always see the way we always do. The child, Celia is most imaginative and can influence other children and this can make it difficult for them. The film also has the killing rabbits, the communists, cruel parents and police men and school teachers who can be even more so.
"If You Say Anything, You'll Die In Hell!"...
CELIA is an interesting film. Set in the 1950s, during the big, Australian rabbit plague, it's about the little girl of the title (Rebecca Smart), who has difficulty with a group of kids in her school. When a new family moves in nearby, Celia befriends the children. Trouble brews when she discovers that her pet rabbit has been taken away due to a recent edict.
With this movie, it's all about the finale, which is quite an unexpected shocker. It packs a punch, and turns what was mostly a drama with political aspects, into a horror story. Ms. Smart is exceptional in her highly-imaginative / disturbed role.
A one-of-a-kind gem...
With this movie, it's all about the finale, which is quite an unexpected shocker. It packs a punch, and turns what was mostly a drama with political aspects, into a horror story. Ms. Smart is exceptional in her highly-imaginative / disturbed role.
A one-of-a-kind gem...
Did you know
- TriviaThe fairy tale from which extracts were recited in the film was The Hobyahs by James H. Fassett and Robert D. San Souci.
- GoofsThe burn mark on Celia's rabbit is missing at the fishing docks.
- How long is Celia?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- Celia: Child of Terror
- Filming locations
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 43m(103 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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