| In
My Father's Den
By Peter Calder
2 October 2004,The NZ Herald
As impressive a feature debut as Rain and the
most substantial local film since the early 90s, Brad McGann's
movie is less an adaptation of Maurice Gee's 1972 novel than one
that, like Phillip Kaufman's The Unbearable Lightness of Being,
inhales the essence of the source material and exhales something
truly original.
As such, it represents a remarkable achievement
by a writer-director who had to maintain his vision in the face
of intense pressure
inevitably brought to bear by the stakeholders in a co-production.
This is a universal story but it's located in
an unmistakably indigenous landscape both physical - Central Otago
deserves a place in the
cast of characters - and emotional. More importantly, this is
a New Zealand unlike Gee's, which, as McGann has observed, has
long
since gone: the relocation in time and place and the changes
in character and motive combine to saturate the story in a thoroughly
modern malaise.
The action is bookended by two funerals. The
second is that of a character whose death we learn about on page
one of
the novel
but not until well after the mid-point of the film. But it's the
one at the beginning that sets the story moving. Paul Prior (Macfadyen),
who arrives late for his father's smalltown send-off, is a photojournalist
who has been away for years and has found fame - but nothing close
to contentment - as an award-winning war photographer.
His return
is greeted with suspicion by his brother Andrew (Moy), an ostrich
farmer with a large chip on his shoulder and a deeply
neurotic wife (Otto); his old girlfriend, Jackie (Rimmer); and
Jackie's daughter, Celia (Barclay), who is entranced by the idea
of escape the worldly visitor represents.
The blossoming of the
relationship between teenager and newcomer into something darkly
ambiguous upsets the knife-edge balance of
the families and local community. Pretty soon skeletons start
tumbling out of closets with an audible clatter and when Celia
goes missing,
suspicion falls on Paul.
McGann and his excellent ensemble exercise
extraordinary control over their material, juggling elements of
poetic psychological
thriller and edgy police procedural with something close to mastery.
McGann says he wanted to make a film driven more by character and
mood than plot, "a slow burner, in which you could spend time
with characters where not much was happening but you were absorbing
the world and engaging in small moments" and Den is a film
of many such moments. Macfadyen makes a great protagonist, neither
hero nor anti-hero, but a character of depth and texture who fills
the screen during many solo sequences and remains intensely watchable.
For further information
please contact:
Elizabeth Trotman, Hoyts Distribution DDI: +(64)
9 306 7525
etrotman@hoyts.co.nz
Kathleen Drumm, NZ Film Commission DDI: +
(64) 4 382 7685
kathleen@nzfilm.co.nz
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