Sweet Country

Showings

The Main 4 Sat, Apr 14, 2018 7:25 PM
The Main 4 Wed, Apr 25, 2018 4:30 PM
Ticket Prices
General Public:$14.00
Members:$11.00
Student:$8.00
Youth (25 & Under/Box Office Only):$8.00
Film Info
Premiere Status:Minnesota Premiere
Festival Programs:World Cinema
Tags:Drama
Suspense
Culture & Society
Historical Drama
Thriller
Human Rights
Western
Release Year:2017
Runtime:113 min
Festivals & Awards:Special Jury Prize - Venice Film Festival
Platform Prize - Toronto International Film Festival
Best Film - Asia Pacific Screen Awards
Country/Region:Australia
Language:English
Website:Official Website
Print Source:Samuel Goldwyn Films
Trailer:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xfFYmtPegOI
Cast/Crew
Director:Warwick Thornton
Co-Director:Warwick Thornton
Producer:Greer Simpkin
David Jowsey
Cinematographer:Warwick Thornton
Screenwriter:David Tranter
Steven McGregor
Editor:Nick Meyers
Principal Cast:Bryan Brown
Hamilton Morris
Thomas M. Wright
Ewen Leslie
Natassia Gorey-Furber
Gibson John
Matt Day
Anni Finsterer
Tremayne Doolan
Trevon Doolan
Sam Neill
Filmography:Samson & Delilah ('09)
The Darkside ('13)
We Don't Need a Map ('17)

Description

Self-defense turns deadly, spurring a man to flee into the Australian Outback in this enthralling period drama from director Warwick Thornton. Based on true events, the film tells the story of Sam Kelly (Hamilton Morris), an Aboriginal stockman living and working on the land of a preacher (played by Sam Neil) in the settler territories of Northern Australia in 1929. As luck would have it, Sam is accosted by a drunken war vet, and, in the chaos, kills the man in self-defense. Sam is certain that the justice of the settlers will not be in his favor, so he and his wife Lizzie escape into the Outback. Close behind are Sergeant Fletcher and his band, including an Aboriginal tracker named Archie, posing threats from which Sam may eventually run out of places to hide.

Director Biography

Warwick Thornton Australian-born filmmaker Warwick Thornton first feature-film was Samson and Delilah (’09), which earned him the Cannes Film Festival’s Camera d’Or prize. Thornton is an alumnus of the Australian Film, Television and Radio School, having majored in cinematography. He is an accomplished cinematographer and is known for short films Green Bush (’05) and Nana (’07).


 


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