The Castle

Memphis Flyer

DIRECTED BY: Rob Sitch

REVIEWED: 06-21-99

The simplicity, and even to a significant degree the predictability of Australian director Rob Sitch's The Castle are among its chief pleasures. The story of a family's struggle to save their home from an airport expansion is the sort of "small film" that affords welcome relief from Hollywood behemoths engorged with frenetic sensation. The Castle, like any good short essay (it runs only 97 minutes), defines its parameters clearly, makes its case, and leaves us with the pleasant knowledge that we've seen a thesis argued well in this case, Dorothy's old rubric that "a house is not a home." Hardly original, perhaps, but not without a certain currency in the new era of suburban anomie housed in conspicuous consumption.

Darryl Kerrigan (Michael Caton), the goodhearted, rumpled-face patriarch of a close-knit, eccentrically blue-collar clan, decides that he is not going to take the government-mandated foreclosure lying down. Although the ramshackle house he built 25 years ago on the outskirts of Melbourne and which he has "organically expanded" from time to time is only yards from one of the airport's runways, it is, as Darryl says, where "our family was built, where people care about you, care for you, where you come back to, where our memories are." Kerrigan and family have accommodated living with noise and landfills and a vista dominated by powerlines, but they do not believe they should have to accommodate losing their unique place in the universe so that the airport can lay in one more runway.

The cast of The Castle is winningly unaffected. Under Sitch's direction, their individual quirks, frustrations, and dreams seem uncontrived and lived-in, and even more eloquent is the film's success in creating a true sense of an integrated unit. Anne Tenney, as Darryl's wife Sal, creates a sympathetic woman whose focus has never swerved from being her husband's biggest fan, raising children who understand what a family can be, making good casseroles, and keeping her hair in place. The Kerrigans' fierce loyalty as a family embraces the son who is serving a five-year sentence for robbery no less than daughter Tracey (Sophie Lee) who has proudly graduated from cosmetology school as a hairstylist. (Another son, who is particularly shy, at times nearly non-verbal, is encouraged quite naturally by his family toward a kind of eloquence in his fascination with inventing gadgets.)

The Kerrigan case is finally taken on by a retired Queen's Councilor who believes that the Australian constitution does not allow for the government to "compulsorily acquire" a citizen's home without "just terms." He argues that fiscal remuneration for the house cannot "justly" compensate for the intangible but fundamental human values that have built the Kerrigans' home.

Although we may be invited to laugh occasionally at the Kerrigans' lack of sophistication or their sense of taste, The Castle is never condescending. If anything, they have much to teach many upscale Americans who have every material semblance of a domestic arrangement and not a shred of family sensibility, and who are raising a new breed of latchkey children who are well-stocked with computers and cell phones but who never sit down with their parents for dinner.

--Hadley Hury

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The Castle
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