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National Film and Sound Archive of AustraliaNational Film and Sound Archive
National Film and Sound Archive of Australia
National Film and Sound Archive
National Film and Sound Archive of Australia
National Film and Sound Archive

Snowtown: Taking matters into your own hands

2010

Snowtown: Taking matters into your own hands

2010

  • NFSA ID7QXWFAT5
  • TypeFilm
  • MediumMoving Image
  • FormFeature Film
  • GenresDrama
  • Year2010
  • WARNING: This clip contains coarse language

John Bunting (Daniel Henshall) whips up a vigorous roundtable discussion amongst a group of friends in the kitchen about the need to take action against sex offenders. Summary by Lynden Barber.

  • WARNING: This clip contains coarse language

John Bunting (Daniel Henshall) whips up a vigorous roundtable discussion amongst a group of friends in the kitchen about the need to take action against sex offenders. Summary by Lynden Barber.

  • Production company
    Warp Films Australia
    Producers
    Anna McLeish, Sarah Shaw
    Executive Producers
    Robin Gutch, Mark Herbert
    Director
    Justin Kurzel
    Writer
    Shaun Grant
    Inspired by the book 'Killing for Pleasure' by
    Debi Marshall
    Inspired by the book 'The Snowtown Murders' by
    Andrew McGarry
    Story by
    Justin Kurzel, Shaun Grant
    Music by
    Jed Kurzel
    Cast
    Anthony Groves, Louise Harris, Daniel Henshall, Lucas Pittaway, Aaron Viergever, David Walker
    Acknowledgements
    Produced with the assistance of Screen Australia. Produced in association with Film Victoria, the South Australian Film Corporation, the Adelaide Film Festival, Omnilab Media and Fulcrum Media Finance
  • This clip shows how Bunting was able to get support for his crimes by whipping up hatred, initially against paedophiles, amongst a motley group of hangers-on. Bunting emerges even in this short scene as an arch manipulator, able to cunningly exploit a sense of grievance in those around him.

    Justin Kurzel directs this scene as an ensemble piece, with characters speaking on top of each other rather than waiting their turn to speak – a technique that gives a sense of natural-sounding spontaneity. The impassioned performance of Louise Harris as Elizabeth towards the end of the clip gives a good idea of why she was voted best supporting actress in the 2011 Australian Academy Awards, for her film debut.

    Snowtown synopsis

    Snowtown is an account of the infamous Snowtown, or Bodies in the Barrels, murders, named after the discovery of eight bodies in an empty bank vault in the South Australian town of Snowtown in May 1999. Two more bodies were found in a backyard in Adelaide’s Salisbury North a few days later. Four men were convicted of committing or assisting in the murders: ringleader John Bunting, Robert Wagner, Mark Haydon and Jamie Vlassakis. The last-named became the Crown’s main witness.

    The film begins with Vlassakis (Lucas Pittaway) and his half-brother living with their mother, Elizabeth (Louise Harris), in a poor Adelaide suburb. Vlassakis and his brother are victims of a neighbouring paedophile when Bunting appears on the scene. A warm, charismatic and friendly character, he seems to relish the chance to become a new father figure to Vlassakis.

    But gradually a far darker side emerges, as Bunting relishes holding forth on what he would do to a paedophile if he caught one. Over time he manipulates the family and the motley group of friends who gather at their home into a frenzy of hate against sex offenders. Vlassakis begins to discover the horrible truth about what Bunting and his associates are up to and is taken into their confidence. Though disturbed by what he discovers, the teenager is scared for his own safety and reluctantly becomes an accomplice to Bunting’s murders.

    Snowtown curator's notes

    Snowtown is a deeply disturbing film made with a skill and integrity that prevents it from being exploitative. It presents a remarkably persuasive and chilling account of horrible real-life events, allowing the viewer to understand how murders as unthinkable as this could have taken place in an Australian suburb. It invites sympathy not only for the murder and torture victims, but also the teenage Vassikilis, who had the misfortune to become de facto stepson to the psychopathic ringleader, John Bunting.

    Director Justin Kurzel, making his feature debut, approaches the material naturalistically, using a largely non-professional cast drawn from the local community. Henshall, who gives a chillingly believable performance as Bunting, is the only professional actor.

    Not all of the sprawling cast of friends and hangers-on surrounding Bunting are easily identifiable. Such narrative haziness fits with the script’s impressionistic approach in which the viewer, seeing things from the viewpoint of the vulnerable Vlassakis, has to gradually piece together what’s been going on behind the scenes. There is one prolonged, deeply upsetting scene of extreme violence and torture at around the mid-way point that many viewers have found very tough to stomach. Apart from this, Kurzel tends to steer clear of explicit depictions of violence, preferring to work via implication or metaphor – the latter in a scene where a potential victim shows off his pet snake eating a mouse.

    From a screenwriting perspective, the script is interesting for the way that it uses a passive protagonist (Vlassakis) to approach a powerfully domineering antagonist (Bunting) – a useful technique used with great success in films as various as The Third Man (1950) and Animal Kingdom (2010).

    Snowtown premiered at the Adelaide Film Festival (which had contributed production funding) to strong reviews and was released in Australian cinemas on 19 May 2011. Snowtown was released in the UK on 18 November 2011 and in the US, as The Snowtown Murders, on 2 March 2012.

    At the first AACTA Awards, it won six prizes including Best Director (Kurzel); Actor (Henshall); Supporting Actress (Harris); Adapted Screenplay (Shaun Grant); Editing (Veronika Jenet) and Sound (Frank Lipson, Andrew McGrath, Des Kenneally, Michael Carden, John Simpson and Erin McKimm). It was also nominated for Best Picture (Anna McLeish and Sarah Shaw), Cinematography (Adam Arkapaw), Original Music Score (Jed Kurzel) and the AFI Members’ Choice Award.

    Notes by Lynden Barber

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