Asides

Something to watch tonight: Wednesday 15 November

By November 15, 2023No Comments

Out of the Blue (Sarkies, 2006)

The film selec­tion on TVNZ+ is get­ting deep­er and bet­ter all the time but I am espe­cially appre­ci­at­ive of the loc­al movies on the slate.

While there are some older films that I would love to see added – rights and resid­uals from early New Zealand film and tele­vi­sion are restrict­ive for fans but import­ant for dir­ect­ors, writers and act­ors – you can get a pretty com­pre­hens­ive his­tory of New Zealand cinema from TVNZ+ alone.

Telling stor­ies from real life can be fraught in a coun­try this size. Everyone seems to know someone who was involved which means there are lots of opin­ions and sens­it­iv­it­ies to navigate.

Robert Sarkies’ 2006 por­tray­al of the hor­rif­ic Aramoana Massacre of 1990 was per­il­ously close to the trau­mat­ic lived exper­i­ences of many people but man­aged to avoid being exploitative.

From my con­tem­por­an­eous review:

Jean-Luc Godard once said that cinema was “truth at 24 frames per second”.

Like most abso­lutes that phrase also works in reverse: the stunt man hasn’t really been shot and the movie star can’t really fly a space-ship – we are being lied to at 24 frames per second.

What, then, do we make of the phrase “based on a true story”? Are true stor­ies some­how truer? In the case of Robert Sarkies’ Out of the Blue, it’s true and you really wish it weren’t.

David Gray’s attack on his Aramoana neigh­bours in 1990, with extreme fire­power and a com­plete absence of con­science, was inex­plic­able then and not much bet­ter under­stood now. Sarkies’ film doesn’t attempt to explain why but you do get a vivid idea of how it might have felt to be hunted by a real mon­ster in your own backyard.

Refer a friend

It doesn’t all work. Dialogue often seems like a short­cut to char­ac­ter rather than some­thing a real per­son might actu­ally say. The ana­chron­ist­ic use of some “greatest kiwi hits” to evoke a peri­od where NZ music was mostly not­able for its absence doesn’t help. The film goes from being unbe­liev­able because of a clunky script to being unbe­liev­able because we really don’t want to believe it. Once the action starts, Sarkies’ excel­lent dir­ec­tion comes to the fore and the film hits its emo­tion­al tar­gets with admir­able accur­acy and power.

I must make spe­cial men­tion of the sound design which made the gun­fire seem so un-Hollywood – I don’t know what gun­fire actu­ally sounds like but it seemed totally believ­able and quite terrifying.

I didn’t men­tion it in this review but Matthew Sunderland’s per­form­ance as Gray was spine-chilling.

Sarkies, I’m told, is in pro­duc­tion on anoth­er true and import­ant New Zealand story and I’m really look­ing for­ward to it.


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Where to find Out of the Blue

Aotearoa: Streaming on TVNZ+

Australia: Not available

USA: Streaming on Tubi

UK: Streaming on Freevee and Icon Film