
'At the centre of the film is the softly spoken teenage protagonist Joshua ‘J’ Cody (newcomer James Frecheville), thrust into a world of crime following his mother’s sudden death. “Mum kept me away from her family, because she was scared,” the teenager comments in voice-over, and we soon learn why.
Joshua’s uncles – brooding armed robber Andrew ‘Pope’ Cody (a cold-eyed Ben Mendelsohn), speed-freak drug dealer Craig Cody (Sullivan Stapleton) and the youngest of the three brothers, Darren Cody (Luke Ford) – are career criminals whose lives revolve around their ferociously loving, totally uncompromising mother, Janine ‘Smurf’ Cody (a magnificent performance by Jacki Weaver).
When a sudden death sends the family spiraling out of control, J discovers that his new world is far more dangerous than he could ever have imagined.
From the opening scene, which perfectly and surprisingly underplays its dramatic potential, it is clear that David Michôd is very much in control of his medium.Central to the film’s success is the writer/director’s decision to focus first and foremost on the Cody family. While this is, on one level, a crime story – and a compelling one – at its heart, Animal Kingdom is a family drama: the story of a family of sociopaths and the poisonous bonds between them.
The characters are meticulously drawn, especially Joel Edgerton’s Barry ‘Baz’ Brown, a criminal experiencing a mid-life crisis as opportunities for armed robbers dry up, and Pope’s best friend. Baz is perhaps the most stable of the crew, and his influence and concern for J – evidenced in an almost tender bathroom scene – verges on the paternal.
Guy Pearce as Detective Senior Sgt Nathan Leckie is an equally compelling figure; a hardened copper who sees J as potentially providing the leverage he needs to crack the murder case he’s investigating, but also a loving family man, and once again a potential father figure for the sullen, sad teenager.
Watching J being pulled in opposite directions, between crime and justice, between honesty and loyalty, the audience knows that sooner or later he has to crack. It’s in guessing which side he will land on that makes Animal Kingdom such engaging and dramatic viewing.
The finely tuned performances, a bleak palette, the superb sound design – at its most memorable in a chilling scene in which a tense Pope sits watching J’s sleeping girlfriend Nicky (Laura Wheelwright) as Air Supply’s bland pop song ‘I’m All Out of Love’ plays on the soundtrack, underscored by an ominous base tone evoking the drama to come – and wonderfully taut editing further contribute to the masterful whole which Michôd and his collaborators have created.'
In other words, I loved it, and very much look forward to seeing it again.Animal Kingdom opens nationally on June 3, 2010.
3 comments:
Hi Richard,
It's the most disappointed I've been in a movie for years
you said:
"Watching J being pulled in opposite directions, between crime and justice, between honesty and loyalty, the audience knows that sooner or later he has to crack."
I don't believe the kind of internal conflict you describe here actually exits in this movie. It's set up that J barely knows his criminal family so the question of loyalty has no weight. And when the cops are portrayed as either criminal or ineffectual and the lawyers are corrupt then the notion of justice has no pull either. The only question was whether J was more afraid of the criminal family or the criminal cops. And the way that question was resolved was, for me, ridiculous.
I think it's an accomplished piece of film making but a terrible script.
Hi Kim - sorry you were disappointed by the film, which is something that I suspect would happen for some people when a film has been so highly praised. It's an intimate, small-scale drama but nonetheless a keenly observed one, I think.
"I don't believe the kind of internal conflict you describe here actually exits in this movie." you say.
I think it does, in the same subtle, internalised way that makes Freshville's performance so interesting throughout the film, but for spoiler reasons I can't discuss it in detail here...
Thanks for responding Richard
for spoiler reasons I can't go into why I think it's such a bad script.
As for Freshville, my wife, who is a very fine actor, has been doing spookily accurate impressions of him around the house. I found him hard to take seriously at the time and even harder now.
Nonetheless, I would still encourage people to go see the film.
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