The Place at the Coast (1987) Poster

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6/10
Pretty bad but great location!
sootysweepandsoo9 October 2006
The movie was pretty lame, but what a nice spot to film! The house in the movie where Ellie goes to meet Margo for the first time is a holiday house that my Pa built in the 50's. Its down the south coast at Durras. My nana and pa have fond memories of the crew and actors coming to shoot. They were allowed to stay and watch filming.

Since i have been going to South Durras on holidays my entire life (25 years), I have to agree with Ellie on the conservation side of things. I really feel sad at the thought of Durras being over developed. Its such a lovely, quiet 'place at the coast'.

OK, so the movie isn't great, but it has sentimental value for me and my family.
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5/10
Good story, but a little slow .
PeterM272 February 2023
Warning: Spoilers
This is a slow-paced but touching portrait of a teenage girl's life on the verge of womanhood in the early 60s.

Tushka Bergen gives a very engaging performance as Ellie, a girl who is very attached to her father following the trauma of the accidental death of Ellie's mother a few years ago. The beach house is an escape to the past they used to share with Ellie's mother on happy holidays when Ellie was a young girl.

Heather Mitchell is also very good as the sophisticated Margot, whose friendship with the younger Ellie is affected when Ellie's father begins to show an interest in her.

John Hargreaves, usually such a good actor, puts in a weaker performance as Ellie's dad, perhaps due to the directing.

Ellie feels her father becoming more interested in Margot than her, and they also clash over a plan by local businessmen to redevelop the coast which would destroy a large part of the wilderness and wetlands that Ellie loves so much. She is disappointed when him and Margot when they do not actively support her opposition to the redevelopment, but the couple are too busy falling in love to help protect the environment with her.

Overall, it's a good story, but a little slow .
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the summer I grew up
petershelleyau13 August 2004
This dull Australian feature centers on the obnoxious Ellie, a ubiquitous rights of passage tale that is set on the coast. With her dead mother and one heck of an attitude, Ellie is part nerd, with an interest in the local bird and plant life, and part author, since she writes a book on same. (Her pseudo-intellectualism is expressed in phrases like "You slay me"). Regrettably, Tuschka Bergen's performance has been pitched at a level of hysteria that totally alienates us from her concerns. We just want her to shut up and go away.

Matters are not helped by the direction of Ogilvie. Although he has a good eye for group scenes - children at a the beach are portrayed as suitably horrible, and a family at Christmas lunch, - overall his camera-work is self-consciously arty. He is far too fond of the creeping effect, his editing is clunky, and the boom is often evident. He also stages a breakdown scene that is inexplicable in tone, as the context is not established until after it. And while the time period is presumably the 1950's, there are clear anachronisms.

Ogilvie's worst crime is his use of John Hargreaves as Ellie's father, Neil. As the treatment shows everything from her point of view, Neil is shunted to the side, and one of Australia's finest screen actors is wasted. However, even playing one of those ocker grotesques, Margo Lee scores some laughs. And in a minor role, Alexander Broun gets to say "Oh my God" in nearly as many variations as Sandy Dennis in The Out Of Towners.
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8/10
A Small Masterpiece
jchyde22 June 2014
Set in early 'sixties coastal Australia and based on real events, this elegiac movie directed by George Ogilvie about pristine bush threatened with extinction by development is told from the viewpoint of feisty young Ellie (Tushka Bergan) an environmentalist before the word was invented.

The film opens as Ellie arrives at Kilkee with her widowed father (John Hargreaves) in expectation of another summer holiday in the usual vein - he goes fishing, she paints water colors of the local flora, and they both stand back when the extended family arrives for Christmas. Enter Margo (Heather Mitchell) fresh from five years in England.

The screenplay by producer Hilary Furlong based on the book by Jane Hyde captures a lost time when large families bundled into flimsy beach houses with primitive amenities for weeks at a time in boiling hot weather.

Cinematographer Jeff Darling captures the heart of the story, the incomparable landscape, in wide uninterrupted shots which editor Nicholas Beauman has the sense not to cut, while Chris Neal's subtle music and the director's unafraid use of silence act as counterpoise to Ellie's mounting rage, the fractious noise of her younger cousins at play, and the roaring, cracking bush as it submits to a storm.

A recent (2014) screening of the film at Sunshine Coast University in Queensland, where it featured in an exhibition called Fibro Coast about the beach architecture and culture of that era confirms The Place at the Coast as an Aussie classic.
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