
Alex (Elena Mandalis) has just seen that Vicki (Dora Kaskanis) is being sexually abused by her own father (George Harlem). She runs to the home of her English teacher, but leaves when a man – another teacher – answers the door. In class the next day, a dazed Vicki hacks into her hair with a blade. When Alex tries to intervene, she holds the blade to Alex’s throat, before walking out. Alex runs to the office of Kate, the English teacher (Maud Davey), who fails to realise how serious the situation is.
Summary by Paul Byrnes
Only the Brave is partly about the moment when childhood ends – and of how abrupt and dangerous that point can be. That may be what is intended by the title – only the brave can continue past this point. Teenage drama is often presented as a series of storms in teacups; this film treats the lives of its characters with deadly seriousness and gravity. Both Alex and Vicki have reasons to act up; both keep those reasons secret, but when Alex finds out about Vicki’s secret, the eruption of guilt and shame has horrendous consequences. The English teacher realises only too late that she has missed the signs of a genuine cry for help. She thought it was just another teenage drama.
Alex (Elena Mandalis) and Vicki (Dora Kaskanis) are best friends, growing up in the industrial suburbs of outer Melbourne. Vicki’s parents are Greek migrants. Alex’s parents were musicians, but her Greek mother left the family years earlier, and Alex longs to know where she is. In school, Alex is the favourite of English teacher Kate (Maud Davey) and Vicki is the rebel. Outside school, they both run wild, setting fires in abandoned houses, drinking and smoking, planning to run away to Sydney to find Alex’s mother. Vicki can’t understand Alex’s reluctance to sleep with a boy; Alex isn’t quite sure yet what her sexuality is. When Alex learns that her friend is being sexually abused, the world collapses for both girls
Ana Kokkinos worked for nine years as an industrial lawyer before deciding she wanted to be a filmmaker. Only the Brave was made soon after she finished the graduate film program at the Victorian College of the Arts (then known as Swinburne) and it was clear evidence that a major new voice had arrived in Australian film. Although made on a low budget, the film showed that Kokkinos had an uncompromising ambition to tell powerful and personal stories. The film’s shocking finale – in which Alex is powerless to stop her friend’s suicide by fire – is extremely provocative and disturbing. It was a sign of things to come. Head On, made four years later, was another shock for audiences, as was The Book of Revelation in 2006. Kokkinos has said she believes artists should provoke and question, and that cinema has the power to provoke a visceral response. 'It’s okay if it creates a fuss,’ she has said.
Notes by Paul Byrnes
The National Film and Sound Archive of Australia acknowledges Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the Traditional Custodians of the land on which we work and live and gives respect to their Elders both past and present.