*****    The New York Times In America
January 16, 2004
MOVIE REVIEW | 'THE TRACKER'
A Ballad About Hunting a Fugitive and Finding Evil
By STEPHEN HOLDEN

A stark moral fable told in the language of the sort of western
Hollywood has stopped making, the Australian director Rolf de Heer's
film "The Tracker" is constructed around a suite of 10 interlocking
story-songs that simmer with political outrage. Composed by Graham
Tardif, with lyrics by Mr. de Heer, and performed by Archie Roach, a
husky-voiced Aboriginal singer, together they suggest an extended
folk ballad in the mode of Curtis Mayfield's "Superfly." The lyrics
describe the oppression of Australian Aboriginals with the same
mixture of sorrow and resistance that fueled the songs of Bob Marley.

Set in 1922 in the outback, the story follows three mounted policemen
and an Aboriginal tracker on a mission to bring to justice a black
man accused of murdering a white woman. The self-consciously mythic
film refuses to name any of its characters. The party's leader is a
sadistic racist known simply as the Fanatic (Gary Sweet). And the
clenched, contained fury of Mr. Sweet's performance makes this
tight-lipped, trigger-happy character such a scary and repugnant
figure that you can barely stand to look at him.

In the movie's most painful moment, the Fanatic casually massacres a
group of innocent Aboriginals, then strings up their bodies, simply
because they don't understand his language. Afterward, he lovingly
cleans his gun and congratulates it for being so "well spoken" and
says, "It's nice to have a comrade who speaks English."

The Fanatic is joined on his expedition by an old-timer called the
Veteran (the leading Australian stuntman Grant Page) and a dewy-eyed
new recruit, the Follower (Damon Gameau), who is increasingly
outraged by the Fanatic's heartlessness.

Guiding the four into the wilderness is an English-speaking
Aboriginal, the Tracker (David Gulpilil), a grizzled, enigmatic
figure who serves as a bridge between the Aboriginal and white
societies and whom the Fanatic views with deep suspicion. As he has
in other Australian films, including "Walkabout," "The Last Wave" and
"Rabbit-Proof Fence," Mr. Gulpilil has the mystical aura of a man so
profoundly in touch with the earth that he is omniscient and safe
from harm.

As the search party forges farther into the outback, the Tracker, who
appears to embrace both his tribal religion and Christianity, is by
turns servile (he calls his white employers "Boss" and doesn't
complain when put in chains) and cunning (an accident in which the
Fanatic nearly drowns may not be an accident). The Tracker ultimately
emerges as a figure of towering moral authority who exists almost
beyond time. The fifth symbolic figure, whose face is shown in
close-up at the start of the movie but who is seen again only briefly
at the end, is the Fugitive (Noel Wilton).

"The Tracker," which opens today in New York, could be seen as a
sequel or a companion piece to "Rabbit-Proof Fence" and is set nine
years earlier. The Fanatic's view of the Australian native peoples is
a more virulent variation of the paternalism voiced by racist
government officials in the other movie. But here the genocidal
impulse isn't to blend the races until blacks disappear but to kill
them at the least provocation.

The primal struggles among the members of the search party are
extremely cut and dried, and the outcome quite predictable. The first
major conflict erupts when the Veteran is seriously wounded by a
spear that comes from nowhere, and the Fanatic decides that he must
be left to face certain death. That heartless decision is only the
first of many that inspire the Follower to rebel, even though the
punishment for mutiny is death.

The film's mythic point of view is evocatively underlined by the
substitution of illustrations for live action whenever violence
erupts. These stylized images by the Australian artist Peter Coad
create an aesthetic distance from the cruelty, lending the atrocities
the stature of events in a historical mural that freezes the past
into an eternal present.

THE TRACKER

Written and directed by Rolf de Heer; director of photography, Ian
Jones; edited by Tania Nehme; songs and music by Graham Tardif,
performed by Archie Roach; produced by Mr. de Heer and Julie Ryan;
released by ArtMattan Productions. At the Cinema Village, 22 East
12th Street, Greenwich Village. Running time: 90 minutes. This film
is not rated.

WITH: David Gulpilil (the Tracker), Gary Sweet (the Fanatic), Damon
Gameau (the Follower), Grant Page (the Veteran) and Noel Wilton (the
Fugitive).

<http://www.nytimes.com/2004/01/16/movies/16TRAC.html> *****

Rolf de Heer's Official Website: <http://www.vertigoproductions.com.au/>

--
Yoshie

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