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WALKABOUT  

Director: Nicolas Roeg
Year: 1971
Runtime: 95 min.
Country: UK
Language: English
Color: Color
Format: 16mm

Nicolas Roeg's solo directorial debut is a haunting, unconventional narrative film that presents a bleak vision of civilized life as arid and unrewarding. Abandoned in the Australian outback, two young white children (Jenny Agutter and Roeg's son Lucien) stumble upon an adolescent Aborigine (David Gulpilil), who is performing a "walkabout." In this ritualistic six-month journey, the boy must learn to survive by himself in the imposing desert. Communication is a problem, although more for the girl than for her little brother, who still has a child's ability to communicate simply and directly. The two teenagers fail to connect for a variety of reasons, mostly due to the girl's lack of interest in a culture that is unfamiliar and different from her own. Ultimately, the differences become too much to bear, resulting in a tragic conclusion that adds an even more somber denouement to Roeg's already grim vision. Based on the novel by James Vance Marshall, WALKABOUT is a powerful commentary on pastoral simplicity versus cosmopolitan clutter, and features stunning cinematography from Roeg.


" WALKABOUT is a superb work of storytelling and its material is effortlessly fascinating."
— Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times

" Arguably director Nicolas Roeg's most enduring success, WALKABOUT is a complex, poetic cinematic experience." — Brendon Hanley, All Movie Guide


 

 
showtime
Monday, June 5 at 7 pm
location
THE GREEN ROOM
144 West Street (across from the Comstock Hotel)
admission
$6 general / $4 GBFS members