Walkabout
Movie Review:
One of
the most strangest and peculiar films I've seen is Nicholas
Roeg's Walkabout, from 1971. Only now, in the past few years,
has it found itself on the video store racks; even though
the film was a 20th Century Fox release, the video is from
Home Vision Cinema, an outfit devoted to the re-release
of classic and foreign films. Certainly, the reason for
the long delay may be in part because Fox would not have
known how to sell the film. Walkabout is strange and baffling.
I thought that after watching it twice, I`d understand it
better, get with its flow. But I didn't. In fact, I think
I find it stranger than before. This doesn't mean that I
dislike the film, but I can't give it full marks just yet.
The
title is a reference to the aboriginals of Australia. A
young man, in order to make the ascent into manhood, I suppose,
goes out into the wilderness to survive on his own; he is
a "walkabout". The story is what happens when this walkabout
encounters two white children, a teenage girl and her young
brother, lost in the outback. Their suicidal father drove
them out there, before attempting to shoot them, then dousing
his car with gasoline before turning the gun on himself.
The children are now completely and utterly lost, and the
camera shows us the grand, uncaring landscape, seemingly
untouched by civilization. Everything looks wonderful through
Roeg's lenses, but that doesn't mean I`d want to go here
on vacation alone; every place is fraught with danger, mainly
of the purely practical kind, where the two kids walk for
miles and miles without water, and where nature, uncaring,
plays funny tricks on these city dwellers.
They
soon meet the aboriginal, hunting for food, killing animals
with his spear. The two kids immediately cling to him, no
doubt because he is useful for the short term. They keep
travelling and travelling without seeming to find any glimpse
of civilization, and they travel together without much understanding
of each other. Most communication is done in vain. The whites
speak English and the aboriginal speaks his language as
if the others should naturally understand each other. They
don't, of course, and this fact calls attention to itself
during a strange sequence in which the little boy tells
a story about, from what I can remember, a mute woman, and
the man who attempts to prove that she talks when alone
at her home. He soon discovers that she just moves her mouth,
speaks to no one, and no sounds come out. All of these people
speak, but they might as well just talk without sound, because
they cannot relate very much to each other. The climax is
even more troubling, as something more than mere language
comes in to play, resulting in tragedy.
The
personality of the girl weighs heavily on the proceedings.
She is so cool and disinterested, even when it comes to
death. She scarcely bats an eye when her father dies, and
rarely talks about it, and definitely not in emotional or
empathetic terms. She is like a blank slate. I don't know
if it is because she can't act, or because Roeg made her
behave this way. In any case, her attitude adds to the theme
of broken communication, especially at the end, where it
approaches something chilling.
Walkabout
is fraught with problems and oddities which I'll never fully
understand. For one, many non-sequiturs litter the narrative.
I really didn't understand why certain moments were included,
like the one where a bunch of scientists goof off (mainly
by trying to peek down a female colleague's blouse (?)),
and the sequence where a white couple attempts to push out
what they see as annoying aborigines while at the same time
attempting to pawn off aboriginal artifacts and replicas
for money. Maybe these scenes are just meant to be intrusions
by the big bad world, I don`t know. But they don't seem
to fit. And the filmmaking style itself can be intoxicating
for some, and pretentious for others. The first time I watched
this, I was fairly intrigued, and this time, I still am,
although it is all still very strange. The first-time viewer
may be startled by some of the imagery and the juxtapositions.
The most noticeable is an unexplained montage of the aboriginal's
killing of his prey and shots of a butcher cutting up meat.
I`m not sure what this is all about, but you will most assuredly
think about it.
Oddly,
this is like an R-rated children's/nature film, if that
makes any sense to you. The film is about youth, we see
pretty pictures of nature and wild animals, there are a
number of cutesy scenes, and the classical score makes it
sound like some old-fashioned Disney nature flick (the original
theatrical trailer, included in the tape, includes a recommendation
from Parent's Magazine). But then we get shockingly graphic
animal killings, some nudity, and much ambiguous sexual
suggestion between the girl and the aboriginal (most of
which was cut in 1971, which may mean that version may very
well have been marketed to families, a probable cause for
the Parent's approval).
Walkabout
is most definitely an experience, although in my opinion,
it is not a classic film. It is too strange, and too disjointed,
to be a complete success.
David
Macdonald
Site
Contents Copyright© The Z Review, unless used with permission.This
site has no intention to infringe on the rights of the film
owners of Walkabout and intellectual copyright holders of the
movies mentioned herein & hold copyright over the movie,
characters, merchandise & storyline.