moviereview

BALIBO

Balibo
1975 and Indonesia is invading East Timor. Roger East travels toward the conflict in search of five missing Australian journalists.
score

4
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1 (unwatchable) to 5 (unmissable)
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Cast
Anthony LaPaglia, Oscar Isaac, Nathan Phiullips, Damon Garneau, Tom Wright

Director
Robert Connolly

Screenwriter
David Wiliamson,
Robert Connolly

Country
Australia

Rating / Running Time
MA / 111 minutes

Australian Release
August 2009

Official Site








(c) moviereview 2006-2009
ABN 72 775 390 361
Filming the story of Balibo is long overdue. One of the most disquieting moments of recent Australian history, it's been ripe ground for a movie since the event took place some thirty-five years ago. Working from David Williamson's searing screenplay, Robert Connolly (The Bank, Three Dollars) has created a stinging account that seeks to do exactly that – address the balance.

When Portugal suddenly and ignobly cut loose the colony of East Timor in 1975, Indonesia was ready to jump. It did, nine days later, seizing the territory in what was widely recognised as an illegal invasion. Five Australian journalists were on hand to tell the story. Footage from Balibo, a village at the heart of the conflict made its way home; the reporters did not.

Balibo is bursting with drama and tension as the young, go-get-'em, rather naïve journos (Damon Garneau and Nathan Phillips among others) chase ambulances in the tropical sun en-route to a grisly end. Their righteous enthusiasm provides the thrills while fellow scribe Roger East (Anthony LaPaglia) and his friendship with a fiery young activist, Jose Ramos-Horta (a stunning performance by Oscar Isaac), provide the poignancy. The latter pulls the former into his sphere in the hope that East will get news home of Indonesia's crimes, knowing that five dead white people will receive infinitely more coverage than a thousand dead brown people. Especially five white Australians.

As East travels to Balibo in search of his missing countrymen, Connolly cuts back and forth between the two strands, building outstanding tension as each story heads to a chillingly inevitable conclusion. His ability to shock with sudden, toe-curling brutality is masterful. Exceptional performances are matched with superior production that makes Balibo more than a valuable history lesson - it's a compelling journey into darkness that marks another high point in Australian cinema.

// COLIN FRASER