
Delilah (Marissa Gibson) nurses Samson (Rowan McNamara) back to health. She bathes him in the water trough, gives him fresh clothes to wear and makes him a meal. As Samson sits in the wheelchair listening to music on the radio, Delilah spreads out the canvas and begins to paint. Summary by Liz McNiven.
Through love Samson and Delilah begin to build a new life for themselves. In this clip the lyrics of the song 'All I Have to Offer You is Me’ express the sentiment and harsh reality of their new life together, and provide closure to their story. The radio plays Charlie Pride singing:
Before you take another step, there’s something you should know
about the years ahead and how they’ll be.
You’ll be living in a world where roses hardly ever grow,
‘cause all I have to offer you is me.
While this final scene provides a sense of hope, it avoids a 'happy ending’ that would be unrealistic for this particular film. At this point, Rowan McNamara and Marissa Gibson have infused their characters with a sense of wisdom beyond their years, and an optimism that transcends the film and hopes for the healing of all Indigenous people. Having survived their ordeal, Samson and Delilah will learn to take care of each other and live a life of mutual understanding. They can finally smile.
Samson and Delilah is the story of two Indigenous teenagers growing up in a socio-economically disadvantaged community in central Australia. Samson (Rowan McNamara) and Delilah (Marissa Gibson) struggle to find the strength, courage and resilience to rise above the challenges of poverty, grief and racism around them.
To escape a small and poor community, Samson and Delilah move to the nearest large town, Alice Springs. They have no money and sleep under a bridge. Samson uses petrol to control his perception of reality, to blank out his pain, loss and misery; Delilah begins sniffing petrol too and together they traverse the streets of Alice Springs and suffer disdain, abuse and deprivation.
Supported by a homeless alcoholic called Gonzo (Scott Thornton) and family from the community, the two survive their lowest ebb and rebuild their lives. They return to the desert to Delilah’s traditional country to rehabilitate from petrol sniffing and try to build a life in tune with their cultural heritage.
The lack of infrastructure, services and resources in this small community in central Australia sets the scene for ill health, unemployment and poor housing. The use of the empty refrigerator, the wheelchair, the ever-ringing but never answered payphone, the broken-down cars and the abandoned church symbolise various dimensions of the community’s decay and depressed state.
Each of the characters in this community attempts to distract themselves in their own way from the monotony and boredom of community life. Some do it through art and music, but in Samson’s case it’s sniffing petrol. However, Samson sees Delilah as the most beautiful part of his world and Delilah in turn responds to Samson. A subtle use of sign language and silent gestures communicate the growing bond between these two characters.
After the death of Delilah’s grandmother, with whom she was very close, and following a beating from their respective families in two separate incidents, Samson and Delilah abscond in the community vehicle to Alice Springs. Here they find themselves even further marginalised within the larger dominant society. With no money, food or accommodation Samson and Delilah sleep under a bridge and depend on handouts to survive. Samson continues to sniff petrol but Delilah is more optimistic.
At one point, she sees a painting by her grandmother on sale in an art gallery window for $22,000, knowing the dealer gave her grandmother $200 per canvas painting. This scene alludes to the rip-off in the Aboriginal art trade in central Australia. Delilah steals canvas and paints to produce an artwork very similar to her grandmother’s painting displayed in the window. When she returns to the gallery to sell the painting, the gallery manager responds with a dismissive ‘not interested’. Later Delilah is abducted by thugs but makes her way back to the makeshift camp a broken young woman. Soon she joins Samson on his downward spiral, with sniffing petrol the only relief from their painful existence.
The soundscapes and visual imagery within the film convey both the sentiment and meaning. Limited dialogue becomes the norm until Gonzo demands the young couple talk to him if they want some of his food. When Samson stutters his name, ‘T-T-T Tamson’, the audience realises that up to this point, he hasn’t said a word; that Samson’s mode of expression transcends words. This highlights Thornton’s ability to harness the power of silence and body language to great effect.
The strength of family and community provides the duo with a second chance. Delilah, the healthier of the two, arranges for them to return to the desert to her traditional country to start a new life together. They find a peace within themselves, each other and their environment. In doing so they overcome the odds pitched against them.
Samson and Delilah was released in Australian cinemas on 7 May 2009. It won the Camera d’Or for Best First Feature at the 2009 Cannes International Film Festival and was nominated for 13 AFI Awards, including Best Actor (McNamara), Actress (Gibson), Supporting Actress (Mitjili Gibson), Editing (Roland Gallois) and Original Music Score (Warwick Thornton). It won eight awards: Best Picture, Director, Original Screenplay, Cinematography (Warwick Thornton), Sound (Liam Egan, David Tranter, Robert Sullivan, Tony Murtagh, Yulia Akerholt, Les Fiddess), Young Actor (an award each for McNamara and Gibson) and the Members’ Choice Award for Best Film.
Notes by Liz McNiven
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.