Director: Russell Crowe
Starring: Russell Crowe, Olga Kurylenko, Jai Courtney & Jacqueline MacKenzie
In A Few Words: A father, having lost his three sons duing the Gallipoli campaign, and then his wife in the years thereafter, journeys to Turkey to find where his sons are buried and bring them home to lay alongside their mother.
Starring: Russell Crowe, Olga Kurylenko, Jai Courtney & Jacqueline MacKenzie
In A Few Words: A father, having lost his three sons duing the Gallipoli campaign, and then his wife in the years thereafter, journeys to Turkey to find where his sons are buried and bring them home to lay alongside their mother.
Rating: 8/10
Warning: Spoilers Ahead!
Oscar winner Russell Crowe’s directorial debut is a sterling one, and
his time behind the camera doesn’t take away from his work in front of it. He’s
brilliant as Joshua Conner, a farmer from north-western Victoria, a man who can
pretty much conjure up water from even the driest ground, and who suffers the
loss of his three sons, Edward, Henry and Arthur, during the brutal Gallipoli
campaign, and then his wife soon after when she commits suicide, unable to deal
with the grief of losing her three sons.
With not much else to live for, Conner travels to Turkey, meets a
Turkish widow (Kurylenko) and her son in Istanbul, before managing to find his way
to the Gallipoli battlefield. There the Imperial War Graves unit are working
with members of the Turkish army to identify the thousands of Australian dead,
and in a sobering moment, we are reminded that the Turks lost more than 70,000
men defending their homeland.
Interspersed with battle scenes and flashbacks to Conner’s three
children when they were much younger, including a particularly well-done scene
in a giant dust storm in the Australian countryside, Conner and the military
detachment comb the battlefield and find the final resting places of Edward and
Henry – one was found to have been shot through the head, execution-style, by
the Turkish commanders, which sends Conner into a rage – but Arthur is nowhere
to be found.
It’s later revealed that Arthur had been taken prisoner, the information
coming from a Turkish major (played excellently by (Yılmaz Erdoğan) who is a part of his country’s fight against invading Greek troops,
and Conner is mixed up in a skirmish between Turks and Greeks as he travels to
the site of where his son was moved after the Gallipoli campaign.
Not based on any particular real event, though certainly highlighting
the harsh realities of the post-war days in both Australia and Turkey – and the
effect the fighting had on everyone from soldiers to family members at home –
the film has a few plot holes, and a somewhat predictable ending, but you tend
to focus less on that because the story is gripping, and the action scenes are
so well put together.
Crowe is sensational. Whether you like the guy as a person or not, it’s
hard not to be moved by his performance in The Water Diviner. There’s genuine
feeling in every scene, and you get the sense that this movie, more than any
other, has been a particular labour of love for him. The way he humanises the
Turkish army – they were fighting to stop us invading them, after all – earned the
movie rave reviews in Turkey and it should do the same here in Australia.
The first World War One-related Australian production of the centenary year of the ANZAC landing at Gallipoli will be hard to top.
The first World War One-related Australian production of the centenary year of the ANZAC landing at Gallipoli will be hard to top.
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