In A Savage Land
I do regret that for the last few years I haven't
lived in Melbourne. Then I might have got to meet the
beautiful and talented Maya Stange. She's been treading
the boards in the former JeffLand and it would have been
a treat to have seen her at work on the stage.
She stars in In A Savage Land. Stange hails from
Western Australia and this is her first lead role in a
feature film.. But enough of that.
This unfortunate film was made by Australia's Bill
Bennet (Kiss or Kill, Spider and Rose, Two If By Sea.) Bill
Bennet had an excellent leading lady in Maya Stange and an
equally effective leading man in the fairly ubiquitous
Englishman Rufus Sewell, but is hampered by an under
worked script for which Bennet and his wife Jennifer,
rather ill advisedly also take credit.
In A Savage Land tells the story of a pair of
anthropologists (Maya Stange and Martin Donovan) who
travel to the Trobriand islands near the then New
Guinea. They're fascinated by the reported avid and
animated sexual habits the natives are reported to
exhibit.
Now this should start ringing alarm bells for mature
cinema goers. The topic smacks of immaturity and
shallowness, not necessarily, but we've seen cheap, easy
ex, or the promise of it, ruin plenty of films before,
most recently Stanley Kubrick's Eyes Should Have Been
Shut.
Anyway off they go from England to check out the
mating habits of the natives, having got married to get
the job, establishing along the way some conflict between
husband and wife regarding the position of an uppity,
bright, modern woman who dares to have her own opinions.
Once they get to the tropics there's some business
regarding who's supposed to be having sex with who in
the village. Someone becomes offended and a native commits
suicide. The white wife goes native and takes up with
the local white trader (Rufus Sewell).
A cliched Australian colonial administrator (Max
Cullen) and a similarly pat local evangelist (John Howard)
make their pompous entries and exits and we find out
almost nothing about the natives, or even the
anthropologists even when the situation gets muddy and
dangerous, and in spite of some spectacular scenery.
The film was reportedly filmed in Niu Guinea under
trying circumstances but there seem to be at least a
dozen fades to a black screen, a sure sign of a poorly
organised effort. This film that could well have been
called In A Slight Script.
It's difficult to become involved in a story with as
many loose plot ends as this one, even one that stars
the very promising Maya Stange.
1 Gone Troppo Fly
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