A love story about a young man who runs away up an isolated Australian river and gets a job with eighth generation oyster famers.
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Reviews
Best movie of this year hands down!
Admirable film.
A brilliant film that helped define a genre
There is, somehow, an interesting story here, as well as some good acting. There are also some good scenes
Oyster Farmer is a curious Australian movie in that its production values are more impressive than the story itself. First and foremost, the music throughout the movie is brilliant in that it suits the movie perfectly. The cinematography is likewise first class - the aerial scenes of the Hawkesbury River in particular are stunning. Also, the editing is tight and keeps the movie from bogging down - the editor and director deserve commendation for keeping the movie flowing.The story itself is quirky and sometimes makes quantum leaps in credibility but, hey, what interesting movie doesn't? The acting is believable and allows you to understand the characters in most cases.As a simple tale of life in a remote river community, the movie works quite well and deserves its reputation as a significant Australian film. Not great, but quite good.
Saw this movie over the weekend in New York at the Quad Cinema.One if the best movies to come out of Australia, period. I highly recommend seeing this film. Visually stunning, without being overwhelming, or detracting from the storyline. With the gorgeous Hawkesbury River as her backdrop, Reeves weaves characters vividly to life with the pithy little concerns and subtleties that are so crucial in a movie so delicate. The script is tight and beautifully executed. Compared to other feature directorial debuts this is an incredible piece. As a stand alone work, I think this movie will be looked back on as the beginning of an Australian legacy. Bravo. I hope to see much more from this very talented director.
I had a schoolmate who was nicknamed "Oyster", but I never understood how he got the name until I saw this movie. The oyster is very hard to get anything out of. It is susceptible to viruses and pollution, a shy breeder, changes its sex and doesn't like loud noises. Here, oyster farming provides a suitably off-beat background to a pleasant romantic comedy. Young, hunky, tattooed and not terribly bright city boy Jack Flange ("it's not a joke") comes to the beautiful Hawkesbury estuary to be close to his sister Nikki who is slowly recovering from a serious car accident in an expensive private hospital nearby. Short on readies to pay the hospital Jack carries out a robbery at the Sydney Fish Markets, posting the money to himself. But the money never arrives and Jack starts to suspect one or more of the locals has filched it.There are plenty of suspects. There's his boss Brownie, grumpily separated from his wife Trish who is working on the lease next door, and Brownie's Irish father Mumbles (actually the most articulate character in the picture). There's Slug, the not very sanitary septic tank cleaner whose beautiful daughter Pearl (what else) Jack takes a fancy to, the entire staff of the local post office and Skippy (no, really) the Vietnam veteran who lives up the river at Utmost Mangrove with a few crazy mates, all deranged by Agent Orange. For a while I thought we were in for an Aussie version of "Deliverance" or perhaps a re-make of the closing scenes from "Apocalypse Now". We know of course the money thing doesn't matter very much; the real questions are will Pearl and Jack get it on and will Trish and Brownie get back together. When Pearl and Jack do get it on we actually get a genuine bucolic, nay, erotic moment.While the recent "Peaches" choked on its own earnestness, writer-director Anna Reeves succeeds here in a modest way by keeping things simple. At times I found myself muttering "nice scenery and fey characters does not a romantic comedy make" and Alex O'Laghlan (at 28 almost too old for Jack), though a great looker, is no Russell Crowe. Diana Glen as Pearl is just all right but there is some great acting from the old pros, David Field as Brownie, Kerry Armstrong as Trish, Jack Thompson as Skippy and above all Jim Norton who as Mumbles makes an incredible character quite believable. Kerry has a scene in which she tends to Jack's wounds in a way the late Anne Bancroft would have admired.One amusing minor detail is that the postal service portrayed is not the corporatised but very public service Australia Post but an organisation called Allied Post with even ruder and more unfriendly operatives. I guess the producers either asked Australia Post to help and were knocked back when the PR people saw the script ("Australia Post does not lose mail") or they decided it wasn't worth asking. New Zealand actress Sarah Smuts-Kennedy who contributes a very believable rude postal clerk is inexplicably not in the credits as shown in IMDb.The Australian Film Finance Corporation handed out $3 million for this film and in contrast with most of its recent investments might get a reasonable proportion back. But I can't help thinking it's all a make-work scheme. Serious commercial films are made in Australia because there is a pool of talent here and it's cheap hence "Moulin Rouge" and "The Matrix" series. As moviegoers do we really need these nice small inoffensive derivative pictures funded by the taxpayer which hardly anyone goes to see? Like Oyster, it's very hard to get anything out of them. It must be admitted there is the occasional pearl ("Three Dollars" wasn't bad), and this film is well made. I still can't help feeling my tax dollars could be better spent.
There was a certain degree of anticipation for this movie for me, since I live in the area where most of the movie is set. And after being part of the experience - drinking at the pub with some of the stars, and watching the film crew in action, it certainly didn't disappoint!! It's not every day that you watch a movie on the big screen set in your own suburb, recognize the faces of locals who have bit parts, and feel a great sense of pride in the beautiful scenery that you have come to know so well... it's a bit surreal.... I'm not sure if I would have enjoyed the movie quite so much if it wasn't set in my home town, but nevertheless, the story was pleasant enough, the characters were likable... some may find it a little slow and tame, and the plot was a little disjointed, with not a great deal of drama or suspense or even character development.The general consensus of my neighbours who have seen the film is that the true star of the movie was the Hawkesbury River.