Miranda Otto, Rebecca Firth, George Shevtsov, John
Alansu, Jessica Napier. (R, 92 min.)
Love and loss and floundering about in search of happiness in the tiny town of Sunray,
Australia. Barrett's feature debut is an oddball melange of off-kilter comedy and
genuine charm, with a hint of magical realism. Somehow it all works and holds together,
but viewers may find themselves scratching their heads in muted wonderment from time
to time. Otto and Firth play Dimity and Vicki-Ann Hurley, a pair of twentysomething
sisters living out a stifling, bleak existence in the dry, dusty hamlet of Sunray,
near Brisbane. Dimity is a fidgety, flat-chested tomboy, given to long rides on her
battered bicycle when not taking orders at the local Chinese restaurant. Vicki-Ann,
on the other hand, is perpetually on the hunt for a reputable boyfriend; alas, the
pickings, in Sunray, are lamentably slim. Into these two lives comes the reptilian
Ken Sherry (Shevtsov), a down-on-his-luck radio jock who takes up residence next
door to the Hurleys and proceeds to woo them both, setting the stage for Barrett's
humorous take on life, love (and the insurmountable need for same), and fish. Barrett
(who also wrote the script) does a marvelous job of it all. Both the terribly shy
and geeky Dimity and her more boisterous sister are cut from the cloth of modern
women, content to pass the days with each other until the mysterious stranger in
his faded denim and cowboy boots arrives. They simultaneously bolt hellbent-for-romance
once a possible option rears its head. It's Dimity who discovers that Sherry may
not be all he seems, though by that time she's already handed over her virginity
to the man (in the wake of a maddeningly slow striptease that's at once painful and
downright hysterical). Her warnings to her lovestruck (and admittedly jealous) sister
go unheeded, though. Before you know it, someone has climbed the side of one of Sunray's
mammoth silos, and tragedy looms. "Peculiar" may be the only apt description
of Love Serenade as a whole. Like many other films from Down Under these days (Sweetie
leaps to mind), the cloistered world of the Hurley sibs is a surreal twilight zone
of mixed emotions, filled with garish, Kmart clothes in Vicki-Ann's half and sack-like
sweatshirts (with matching sensibilities) in Dimity's. It's never a smooth ride to
true love, but Barrett and her remarkable cast certainly make it an interesting one.
3.0 stars
--Marc Savlov
Full Length Reviews
Love Serenade 
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