Join the Comic-Con group
Advertisement

Walkabout
  • 0
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • Rate this movie.

Buy it now on DVD
Starting at $22.42

Rent it, watch it, find it

Advertisement

Directed by Nicolas Roeg.
The contrast between modern, urban civilization and life in the natural world lies at the heart of Nicolas Roeg's visually dazzling drama Walkabout. In broad outline, the plot might resemble a standard fish-out-of-water tale: two city children become stranded in the Australian outback, and struggle to find their way back to civilization with the help of a friendly aborigine boy. But Roeg and screenwriter Edward Bond are concerned with far more than the average wilderness drama, as a shocking act of violence near the story's beginning makes clear. This is particularly true in regards to the relationship between the white children and the aborigine boy, who ultimately develops a troubled romantic attraction towards the older sister. Obviously intended as a statement on the exploitation of the natural world and native cultures by European civilization, the film nevertheless maintains an evocative vagueness that usually -- but not always -- favors poetry over didacticism. Most importantly, the film's justifiably acclaimed cinematography is likely to sway even those who find fault with the film's narrative and message. The shift between the sterile city images and the truly stunning, beautifully composed Australian landscapes provide the film's single best argument, making the film a vivid and convincing experience. ~ Judd Blaise, All Movie Guide
[more]

Reviews and discussions

Write a review

CinemaRianCinemaRian Walkabout (1971, Australia, Nic ...
by CinemaRian in CinemaRian Blog
hasn't rated it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"We are told from a title card that a walkabout is a ritual undergone by adolescent male Aborigines (the native people of Australia) on their path to adulthood. The teenager is given a certain distance to walk, where he must entirely live off the land, with no assistance from his tribe. That sounded like a great premise for a movie, but when the film opened I was surprised to find that the opening of the film follows two white kids as they go on a picnic in the desert. And like so many films with racial themes, Walkabout falls into a trap. It wants to be about the journey of an Aboriginal boy turning into a man, but Roeg apparently feels that an audience needs a white protagonist. We didn't and it dilutes the movie's power. The two white kids (no character is in the movie is named, so I'll have to be general) are British, traveling with their father (John Melion) by car across the Australian outback. They stop for a picnic for lunch, and the father tries to kill the children, ... " [More]
JScottJScott Mother of Mine
by JScott in JScott Blog
loved it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"Mother of Mine is a film that focuses on the unseen impacts of war. Eero [Topi Majaniemi] is a Swedish child sent to live in Denmark after his father dies in the war and his mother gives up on life. He is taken in by a mother who isn't excited to have him and a father who wants nothing more than for Eero to be able to adapt and thrive. He takes Eero to school where they call him the "war child" which is all he knows about his identity anymore. It takes over his life. All he imagines are air raids.Every actor in this film is much more than capable. Personally I think the acting is the biggest strength of the entire film. Klaus Haro mixes the strength of the acting with the natural beauty and depth of the Finnish landscape.I am in the camp of people who believe the flash forwards take away from the film more than they add. I think the story would flow better and perhaps have more impact if it weren't for the disjointed feeling the flash forwards evoke.I thin ... " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Spout Mavens review - Ten Canoes
by Risselada in Risselada Blog
liked it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"Ten Canoes is my favorite Spout Mavens screener if I have watched so far.I saw a little blurb about it from a Spout blog a month or two giving high praise to director Rolf de Heer as something like the most important director working right now. It was a shockingly definitive statement from what I recall. I think it was from Paul (Paul where have you been lately? I haven't seen a post from you in any of the groups for several months). Looking at his credits there were some movies that interested me a bit more than Ten Canoes though. Bad Boy Bubby looks potentially right up my alley actually. So I was hoping that I wouldn't be potentially be turned off to him by one movie when I may like some of his other ones.The only think I could think about when looking at the cover of this movie and hearing the description was the movie Walkabout. After watching Ten Canoes I read all of the other Spout Maven reviews, and I'm incredibly surprised that no one else has mentioned ... " [More]
JScottJScott One of my favorites
by JScott in JScott Blog
loved it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"Walkabout If Dr. Emmett Brown slid his DeLorean into my driveway and said, “Grab your duffle bag Marty, we’re going back… to the future” I would first tell him my name is not Marty, and then I would grab Nicolas Roeg’s masterpiece Walkabout, pull down the passenger door, buckle up and prepare to be dazzled by the wonderment that the future holds. My vision of the future has the Internet as the main pipeline that feeds world information from all corners to all corners. Some cultures will get trampled and possibly even forgotten in the shuffle. Not only is Walkabout an incredible movie technically speaking but it also tells the story of maturity and warns against globalizing culture. The driving essence in Walkabout is the rite of passage. For the three main characters the survival of the outback is their survival from childhood. The Black boy (actual character name, I am not racist, played by David Gulpilil) is t ... " [More]
totorototoro Gets Better The Older I Get
by totoro in totoro Blog
loved it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"I first saw this story of culture clash at an early age. Back then I understood it as a tale of desert survival. As I get older, I realize more and more that it is a film about what gets lost in the drive towards modernization. While a lot of the "symbollism" is quite obvious and overblown, and the use of zoom is almost laughably dated, the film is on the whole so quiet and contemplative that it has survived its datedness to be one of my all time favorite films. It is one of the rare films that gets more interesting each time I rewatch it. " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
loved it.
Arguably director Nicolas Roeg's most enduring success, Walkabout is a complex, poetic cinematic experience. Roeg's overactive sense of symbolism is well-suited to the films themes of loneliness, alienation and social consciousness. Walkabout retains the director's offbeat style -- very little dialogue, shifting points of view, graphic, often shocking images, and an almost misanthropic world view -- but has a coherence and emotional depth missing from much of his later work. Though film's plot is often fascinating, it is Roeg's use of the camera -- both in broad strokes and minute observations -- that propels the film. He treats his characters as just one aspect of the sumptuous beauty and horror at play in the Australian outback. ~ Brendon Hanley, All Movie Guide
 



Community ratings

mavens
Spout mavens
liked it.
most people
Most people
are neutral about it.

Other opinions

paul
paul
loved it.
Puhnner
Puhnner
loved it.
chesterfilms
chesterfilms
loved it.
radiogerbil
radiogerbil
lost interest.
dog99world
dog99world
is not interested.
dragonreborn
dragonreborn
is not interested.