Australia Day (2017) Poster

(2017)

User Reviews

Review this title
12 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
5/10
Powerful movie.....but why is it called Australia Day?
mblakey3326 January 2018
I was pretty excited when i herd there was a movie coming out called "Australia Day". I thought it would be a great movie to celebrate one of our great calendar days. However it was not at all an uplifting movie at all, instead a powerful movie set with three stories of three different nationalities dealing with some brutal cultural differences. I did like it and it was great seeing Bryan Brown back on the screen, but it could of done with a different name. Score: 5/10
3 out of 14 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
Worst movie ever made
PaddysMovieReview9 January 2019
I watched 20 minutes of this awful movie and it's everything Australia is not. It's an anti-Australian movie from the eyes of socialist lefties in the lame movie industry in this country. Don't bother watching.
26 out of 47 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Copycat
Unimatrix_Zero1 October 2017
I love Aussie movies, good or bad I'll see them all. (clear bias) I neither liked nor disliked this movie. Acting was patchy and editing failed it miserably. Brown was typically the lynch pin and perhaps without his presence the movie would have been completely lost. My gripe about this movie was the obvious mirroring of the movie Crash. Crash is an extraordinary movie, this movie is not.
16 out of 27 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
Don't bother.
shaunh-1175210 January 2019
A waste of time. Written by the left, remember white man bad.
21 out of 41 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
No Pundits Here
pub-217 February 2020
Can't believe the majority of reviews here being so negative. 2 of the most positive ones live in Brisbane, well guess where I live. It's actually typical of any Australian capital cities I have spent time in. This movie is not and never was meant to be about patriotism. It's about the real life racism that comes with such a wide and diverse range of cultural backgrounds that Australia has. That has been impaled on Australia by every Government since the WWII. Their greed has allowed policies on immigration to be too lax allowing a more rapid population growth. In a poor attempt to imitate the USA, toward wealth and power. Australia Day (the movie) deserves much more credit than it is garnering here. No not the best movie you will ever see but worth the watch, unless you have your head in the sand like most of the reviewers here. 7.5/10
8 out of 13 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Not sure what this film was about
kjc24831 December 2017
No interesting characters infact all the characters should be in jail. A lot of scenes with people running around the streets of Brisbane. Nothing to do with Australia Day just set on that day. Has a very strange scene between brother and sister.
17 out of 34 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Unsettling truths
danielbrown-4710621 January 2018
Australia day kicks off with several broken stories not making much sense, but carrying the most uncomfortable and unsettling vibe, so much so that I spent the better part of this movie prepared to turn it off. I don't need reminding of the regressive mindsets that are still so prevalent because having spent 10yrs of my early adulthood 16-27yrs of age in Brisbane, I know the story all too well..

The overall premise of the film is of overcoming adversity and this wasn't clear for the better part of the movie where you're left gritting your teeth to bare it. For this one however, it was worth waiting out till the end to see what the film makers where trying to do. The messages/lessons they aim to bestow hold a very relative nature, relative to the times we live, the issues we face as humans in our current condition and the relativity we hold to each other.

Don't expect to leave your viewing session with a smile on your face, but you will leave with a handful of seeds planted in your mind that should see grow, I call whatever movie or piece capable of doing this, one of great merit across the board.. and this film is no exception to that. You may not have a smile on your face, but at least in my case, you will have a few tears welled up in the corners of your eyes and a bit to ponder about.

We have a lot to address here in Australia and some of the most important topics of which start at home where this movie has based itself. Our issues aren't in the demise of agriculture, or what color skins are dating ones sister etc, but only how we relate each other.. seemingly the most overlooked of all issues until something grave impacts us such as the atrocities that are able to go on whilst we only care about ourselves.
17 out of 33 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
Don't waste your time
tonystelli7 November 2018
It's pretty obvious that the writer (maybe director too) sees race relations in Australia through the lens of corporate, main-stream news organisations.

Sadly, there will be many who live in that same deluded, white man's bubble who'll think that this movie is so "powerful."

If the racial stereotypes weren't bad enough, enter Bryan Brown who plays your typical, white, cliche hero to save the day.
14 out of 27 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Important messages
victoriajayne-3328026 January 2018
An excellent film with a heap of good performances from a mostly young cast plus Bryan Brown being as superb as ever . I liked the realism of the script too .
6 out of 15 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
2/10
not really
randomStuff1011 February 2020
Watched on TV - they aired it on Australia Day, but the title doesn't fit the movie.

I didn't make it all the way. The characters were running around at the beginning, and then boring scenes followed, some violence, random poorly shot scenes, and editing throws you out of the scene and places you in some random disconnected scene. Had to quit.

and too much steady cam. 2 stars.
3 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
A very powerful film
louiserichardbaker4 October 2017
A brilliantly executed movie set in my hometown, Brisbane, which captures many of the multicultural issues confronting modern Australia. The cast - relatively unknown apart from Bryan Brown - deliver a powerful, complex story which illustrates many of the cultural issues confronting modern societies. It was a real edge-of-the-seat production with completely unpredictable outcomes.
15 out of 40 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Powerful Resonance
diogenes-858-44916715 February 2018
The majority of us (Australians) live in cities and towns where these stories occur. We see the product of Australia Day simmering around us, in differing forms, every day. This movie takes us beneath the surface. We're allowed to follow those people we've taken for granted, dismissed, buffered ourselves against or plain ignored because we can. As sober entertainment and something worth watching, the results are a thing to be proud of.

Stephen M Irwin and Kriv Stenders get the basics right with the writing and direction, and it shows in this movie becoming greater than the sum of its parts. Story telling and performances are solid in that benefit.

Excellent casting, awesome technical and camera unit work pull us into the lives and drama of our everyday victims and protagonists. Uniformly good writing, direction and excellent performances allow us to genuinely care about the strangers lives we're watching, Brian Brown captures the quiet desperation of an older, Australian man caught between a rock and a hard place, trying to do the right thing. Plaudits to the cameraman on his closeups of Brown. The Australian landscape and Brown's face are now synonymous. The people and drama in Australia day will resonate strongly with many Australians. It entertains and confronts us with truths we're usually able to walk past. Foreign audience will enjoy it as something casting a believable, strong reflection on Australian people, and the Australian enigma.
6 out of 18 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed