Conor a young actor, leaves for an acting job in the countryside. Following precise instructions, he and his fellow actresses are supposed to re-enact scenes from the life of Joe, a terminally ill director. Yet the setting is more spring-like than morbid and Conor makes himself familiar not only with Joe's life but with the place, a sort of spiritual hotel.
The film's title refers to an Australian Aboriginal dance ritual, and Conor comes across as an invited guest at a ritual who initially has only a vague idea of its meaning. It is the strict emphasis on form that is immanent to both, ritual and film. Hackworth fortunately refrains from conventional narrative tricks and psychologically one-dimensional and predictable characters. His narrative movements are circular instead of following a straight line. And the gap that is layed out in the constant double role play offers to deliberate narrative story-telling as such. The excellent ensemble makes sure that this is not a mere intellectual pleasure. Insofar as Friedrich Schiller's concept of the "Spieltrieb" (the play drive) defines playing as a link between sensual and intellectual perception, Corroboree displays a very playful director. Let's hope, he'll never grow up.
Anna Hoffmann
Production: I Won't Grow Up Pty Ltd., Melbourne
Screenplay: Ben Hackworth, Peter Savieri
Camera: Katie Milwright
Cast: Conor O'Hanlon, Rebecca Frith, Natasha Herbert, Susan Lyons, Jane McArthur, Margaret Mills, Ian Scott, Jethro Cave
Format: HDCam, Color
Running time: 96 min.
Language: English