Van Diemen’s Land
Oscar Redding, Jason Glover, Thomas Wright, Paul Ashcroft, Arthur Angel, Mark Winter
A visionary interpretation of the haunting tale of Australia's most notorious convict.
Director: Jonathan auf der Heide
Producer: Maggie Miles
Exec Producers: Jonathan auf der Heide, Oscar Redding
Scriptwriters: Jonathan auf der Heide, Oscar Redding
Editor: Cindy Clarkson
DoP: Ellery Ryan
Production Designer: Leanne Caruana
Music: Jethro Woodward
Cast: Oscar Redding, Jason Glover, Thomas Wright, Paul Ashcroft, Arthur Angel, Mark Winter
Production Company:
Noise & Light PTY Ltd
tel: +61 418 851 622
International Sales:
Bavariafilm International, Bavariafilmplatz 7, Geiselgasteig, 82031, Germany
tel: +49 896 499 2686, fax: +49 896 499 3720
email: info@bavaria-film.de
2009 Archive
Festival Diary: June
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Comments
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#1 Phil Smith / Saturday 20 June, 2009 / 23:43 GMT
My only disappointment is that the Q&A at the end revealed the equally fascinating aftermath of the plot's events that couldn't have been comfortably inserted into the film.
#2 Mike Hall / Monday 13 July, 2009 / 22:01 GMT
Despite its’ simplicity, it’s an affecting tale, helped by the sparse, evocative and apologetic “I’m a quiet man” voice-over that threads its way through the narrative, holding together the otherwise un-holdable. It’s very much ‘in-your-face’ as there’s little historical explanation, and only the vaguest sense of any future ahead, which compels you to focus on the here-and-now. The score is haunting, and the film is beautifully shot, with bleached-out greens emphasizing the unforgiving nature of their surroundings and predicament.
The trailer gives a good indication of what to expect, including two of the more iconic sequences that stayed with me long afterwards – one scene where the group are running time-lapsed and ghost-like through the forest trying to escape their pursuers, the other the shockingly swift brutality with which the second inmate on the menu meets his maker.
On the downside, I struggled to hear some of the heavily-accented dialogue (especially when the speaker was off screen), and it was hard to believe that there were no other nutritious animals in a rainforest, bar a solitary snake. Given their limited resources, quite how they would have caught them is another matter, but they’d have sure as hell tried, to save from eating each other.
I came out feeling like I’d been badly mauled after 12 rounds in a ring with an enormous and unbeatable foe. It’s a real powerhouse of a film that I would most certainly recommend, even though one viewing is quite sufficient for me in this lifetime. 7/10.