Frequent strong coarse language and drug references
| Director: | Ivan Sen |
| Actors: | Daniel Conners, Christopher Edwards, Dean Daley-Jones |
Amidst the physically, emotionally and spiritually empty spaces of Toomelah, one of Australia's most impoverished Aboriginal communities, ten-year-old Daniel's life is sliding toward oblivion. All but abandoned by an uncaring mother and ruinously alcoholic father, Daniel falls in with a local drug dealer and his crew, only to find his new world of petty crime holds its own dangers.
Raw, intimate, and laced with mob humour, Toomelah seamlessly intertwines issues like the Stolen Generation, substance abuse and cultural erasure with an everyday story about one boy caught in the downward spiral of a neglected community.
| Status: | QuickPick |
|---|---|
| Run time: | 106mins |
| Origin: | AUSTRALIA |
| Aspect Ratio: | 16:9 |
Ivan Sen is unquestionably one of the most important Australian filmmakers working today – but being regarded as an ‘important’ filmmaker can be a poisoned chalice, particularly as fans, participants and funders of local film debate the merit of so-called ‘important’ Australian cinema. I’m hesitant to praise his new film, Toomelah, despite it being comprised of typically laudable themes. Bleak and meditative, it unfortunately treads the same territory of countless pictures that have come before, and I find it hard to excuse its despairing nature when it’s so similar to so many other films. Shot by Sen over the course of 5 weeks, it concerns young Daniel (Daniel Connors), living in the indigenous mission of Toomelah (depicted as a post-apocalyptic wasteland). His father is a drunk, and his ...
Ivan Sen is unquestionably one of the most important Australian filmmakers working today – but being regarded as an ‘important’ filmmaker can be a poisoned chalice, particularly as fans, participants and funders of local film debate the merit of so-called ‘important’ Australian cinema. I’m hesitant to praise his new film, Toomelah, despite it being comprised of typically laudable themes. Bleak and meditative, it unfortunately treads the same territory of countless pictures that have come before, and I find it hard to excuse its despairing nature when it’s so similar to so many other films. Shot by Sen over the course of 5 weeks, it concerns young Daniel (Daniel Connors), living in the indigenous mission of Toomelah (depicted as a post-apocalyptic wasteland). His father is a drunk, and his mother’s a druggie, so he looks up instead to the relatively more ‘together’ older guys in the community – drug dealers (he’s got to work with what he’s got). Aggressive on the outside, and terrified on the inside, Daniel tags along with the gang, even after they’re are threatened by a newly-arrived alpha male (Dean Daley-Jones). Toomelah is far from fun (although that’s not exactly a cinematic pre-requisite), but it’s a minor instalment in this highly-specific genre. The Kid with a Bike, dealt with similar themes in a much more profound way.
2.5/5