Genre: Drama
Director: Rod Hardy
Cast: Daniel Radcliffe, Christian Byers, Lee
Cormie, James Fraser, Teresa Palmer, Jack Thompson, Kris McQuade,
Suzie Wilks, Victoria Hill, Sullivan Stapleton
RunTime: 1 hr 45 mins
Released By: GV
Rating: NC-16 (Some Nudity and Sexual References)
Official Website: www.decemberboys.com
Opening Day: 15 November 2007
Synopsis:
One summer, four orphans boys who have grown to be the closest
of friends find themselves competing for the attention of
the same family.
Movie Review:
Sexual awakenings and the yearning for a place to call home
form the crux of this film’s peddling of maudlin adolescent
nostalgia. If the “December Boys” had found itself
being pruned of its prattle, maybe the coming-of-age blueprint
set in the 1960s Australian seaside would have been efficient,
perhaps even charming. As it were, the film’s frustrating
penchant for overly wistful, precious storytelling encumbers
its December-born orphans from being anything more than self-pitying
and depressive.
“Harry
Potter! As you’ve never seen him…” could
have been the film’s de facto tagline, if it wasn’t
just so egregiously tacky. So aware of its marketing import,
Daniel Radcliffe’s much-ado-about-nothing onscreen deflowering
is self-consciously acted upon, a performance riding on perception,
but in the process rendering its key scene unremarkable to
the film’s few overriding semblances of a conflicted
juvenile psyche. Further obfuscating its genuine moments of
emotional clarity, are its exaggerated religious overtones
and witless representations of sexual desire. Visions from
the Virgin Mary and brazen young women (also hinting at the
film’s cavalier idealisations of females) intermittently
litter the aching sense of longing that its best scenes imply.
The
four-strong pack of orphans that are sent to live with a retired
naval officer and his wife for the summer in Lady Star Cove
is led by the oldest, Maps (Radcliffe), and his precocious
younger lieutenant as well as the film’s wizened narrator,
Misty (Lee Cormie). Away from the reality of the convent,
they begin to existentialise their dilemmas being raised without
a family or even without a core sense of identity. This doesn’t
worry Maps as much as it does Misty, even though the age difference
between them span just a few years, it does relate considerably
in terms of any impending adoption or more pointedly, the
burgeoning transition into adulthood during this short period
of time.
Though
partly concerned with Maps's escalated coming-of-age during
this eventful summer, “December Boys” expands
its purview to include a more disquietingly bizarre imagining
of magical-realist visions by seer-like Misty – a decision
that ironically amplifies the familiar skew of the rest of
its proceedings. Yet more enduring than its rather slushy
portrayal of maturation is the film’s final images,
a stamp that reinforces its own commitment to be as conventional
and manipulatively cloying as it can possibly hope to be.
Movie Rating:
(Dull and excessively mawkish, it could have done
with more focus)
Review
by Justin Deimen
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