Cunnamulla

2000
6.9| 1h22m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 14 December 2000 Released
Producted By: Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Country:
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

Cunnamulla, 800 kilometres west of Brisbane, is the end of the railway line. In the months leading up to a scorching Christmas in the bush, there's a lot more going on than the annual lizard race. Here, Aboriginal and white Australians live together but apart. Creativity struggles against indifference, eccentricity against conformity.

Genre

Documentary

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Cast

Director

Dennis O'Rourke

Production Companies

Australian Broadcasting Corporation

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Cunnamulla Audience Reviews

SpuffyWeb Sadly Over-hyped
Curapedi I cannot think of one single thing that I would change about this film. The acting is incomparable, the directing deft, and the writing poignantly brilliant.
Kaelan Mccaffrey Like the great film, it's made with a great deal of visible affection both in front of and behind the camera.
Justina The film never slows down or bores, plunging from one harrowing sequence to the next.
bunyipsfantasy I think that Cunnamulla was the worst film made in the entire world and I think that Dennis O'Rourke should be shot. The film maker should crawl back in to what ever crap hole he crawled out of, if he was searching for the real Austrlia and thats what he came up with he has surely got to be locked up for life.And while being locked up he should take the time to gain some education that might help him to get a real job instead of wasting ABC money on poor films that a two year old is capable of producing. to conclude i would like to state that any further films by Dennis O'Rourke should be put in the scrap bin.
daniel miau to those of you who think this is a negative movie, i have to disagree.it's not depressing. it's honest in a way that most people would rather not know. it is "a picture from life's other side" (to quote an old american folk song). another thing: this is not a movie about "losers" though it may appear so to those who hold preciously to middle australia.for those who view the characters in this film in this manner, i cannot understand you. i admire all the characters in cunnamulla, because they demonstrate spirit despite being dealt some difficult circumstances. to the other "negative" reviewers, whatever happened to your compassion? it is not o'rourke's film which is negative but your judgements on the characters in the film which are.paul the aboriginal boy in the cycle of crime shows incredible insight and understanding of his plight. but it his attitude moreso than his understanding which i think gives him incredible strength of character. i would go as far to say that he is heroic. in telling us about his plight he says it with such innocence and acceptance. he displays neither bitterness, angst, or self-pity. i was humbled by this, and equally ashamed at the disparity of opportunities society provides to different groups of people.and who says that dennis o'rourke was not welcome back in cunnamulla? that is not how the bulk of dennis' subjects felt towards him after they saw the film. after listening to what a lot of people say about this movie, it is obvious that people bring their prejudices, presumptions and preconceptions into this movie to interpret it. so the discourse created from this movie reveals a lot about the audience.i think there is a lot to this film. there are several main characters who for me distill much of the essence of the australian psyche. that is, the deep-rooted skepticism to political and religous authorities. a stoic persona which has no room for sentimentality. yet below that surface there is always a tolerance there i think, and a sense of compassion. and complimenting the skepticism is a fierce sense of independence and the ability to take the micky out of oneself. this is just one small part of cunnamulla and there is a lot more to this movie than this.i think this film is a mirror in many ways, and therefore being truthful and not prone to flattery. and if there is distortion it is for the sake of humour more than anything else.
Philby-3 Dennis O'Rourke has a reputation for exploiting the subjects of his documentaries (`The Good Woman of Bangkok', `Cannibal Tours' for example), and I can see why he's not welcome back in Cunnamulla. Here, he has picked four or five desperates in a declining south-west Queensland country town, got them to open up and let the camera do the rest. His subjects skewer themselves on the lens as O'Rourke, off-screen, quietly eggs them on. Actually, there's a bit more to `Cunnamulla' than that. The general atmosphere of the place is well-evoked. We get a concert and a show; it's not all existential angst in the boondocks. People do grow up in such places, and prosper (though often elsewhere). But O'Rourke's main interviewees, the abused teenage girls, the depressed aboriginal boy with a record, and even the local DJ do not face a bright future. There's a bit of humour in the taxi-driver and his chatty wife, the scrap yard man with attitude and the shire dog-catcher who doubles as funeral director, but the overall tone is deep depression.My real problem with the film is that it doesn't really try to explain how people get to the end of the line or the bottom of the heap like this. Frankly I don't think the director cared very much. It's a well-done piece but with a cold clinical atmosphere - Darwin does Cunnamulla. It seems to me it provides ammunition for the social Darwinists who maintain it's no use helping the losers as that just postpones their inevitable extinction. There are some people who just want to be left alone, like the scrap-yard man, and so he should be. But the young kids need help and could benefit from it. O'Rourke seems to be saying `why bother?' Because it would be good for your soul, mate, if you have one.
sshan One hopes that Dennis O'Rourke's film on backwater Queensland town, Cunnamulla, is a personal view in which he chooses to highlight only negative characters for dramatic effect. If it is a truly representative profile of life and people in the town, then it becomes even more frightening and depressing.His metaphor of "the end of the line" is played out with devastating effect, as each character tells of their one-way track to nowhere.The characters have become trusting enough of the director to say things that that they probably oughtn't to have said into the camera. This brutal and embarrassing openness makes for a gruesome and somewhat prurient fascination.Despite the strong sense of exploitation that comes with this film, it remains a powerful and engrossing statement and probably encapsulates enough essential elements of rural claustrophobia to resonate for many viewers.