Sparse, textured and bleak, director-cinematographer Warwick Thornton’s Sweet Country
is a soulful slice of Australian history mixed with the tropes of a
classic Western. In some ways, it is a spiritual prequel to Thornton’s
2009 debut Samson & Delilah, a contemporary look at
Australia’s marginalised Aboriginal community. Both films feature
couples on the run. Both offer depictions of a fractured national
identity. Both are told with attention to detail and remarkable poise.
Sweet Country begins on a sustained close-up of a boiling
cauldron as a violent fight between a white cattle station master and a
black farm hand plays out on the soundtrack. It’s a sense of racial
tension told through startling economy that courses through the whole
film. Benevolent preacher Fred Smith (Sam Neill)
lends his farmhand Sam Kelly (Morris) to new neighbour Harry March
(Leslie) to work on his cattle station. The bigoted, boozed-up March
terrorises Kelly and his wife, to the point where Kelly shoots him in
self-defence. Knowing the consequences of an indigenous Australian
killing a white man, Sam and Lizzie go on the lam. Soon, a group, lead
by bastard-hard lawman Fletcher (Brown), butting heads with Smith, head
out to track down the runaways.
At that point, you would expect the start of a typical
hunters-and-the-hunted dynamic. Instead, Thornton eschews
tension-building techniques — there’s no score to hype the drama, the
cross-cutting between posse and prey is leisurely — in favour of
lavishing care on his characters. In its final act, it becomes a
courtroom drama, albeit one that takes place on deckchairs in a dusty
street with the gallows being erected before the verdict is reached.
It’s a difficult watch. The violence is brutal, over as quickly as it
erupts, and the plot meanders, Thornton sewing in unnerving flashbacks
and subliminal flash-forwards pointing to tragedies yet to unfurl. It’s
also a tactile film. Shot in Central Australia’s MacDonnell ranges, it’s
stark and stunning: you can almost feel the punishing sun, the sounds
of hooves on salt flats hit on a gut level. It’s the sweep of Howard
Hawks’ Red River but de-romanticised by Ozploitation steel.
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