David Wenham Movies
David Wenham is a versatile, red-haired actor whose chameleon-like ability to disappear into his characters has found him successful in everything from large-scale epics to intimate domestic dramas. His success on the stages of his native Australia eventually led him to international success thanks to roles in such acclaimed features as
Moulin Rouge (2001) and the final two entries in the
Lord of the Rings trilogy. The youngest of seven siblings,
Wenham was raised in Merrickville, Australia. The aspiring actor honed his craft at the University of Western Australia before making an impression on television audiences with a role in the popular small-screen drama Sons and Daughters in the mid-'80s. As the '90s rolled in, so did the film roles, and after a memorable turn as an embittered ex-convict in the stage play The Boys,
Wenham landed parts in such features as
Greenkeeping (1992) and the Hollywood sci-fi action film
No Escape. In 1996, he found critical acclaim when he transferred his role as a pyromaniac in Cosi from stage to screen. After taking on a handful of small film and television parts,
Wenham once again reprised a theater role with the release of
The Boys in 1998. His big-screen portrayal of the explosive ex-convict who returns home after a short sting in prison found
Wenham the darling of Australian critics.
With a popular role in the 1998 Australian Broadcasting Company series SeaChange,
Wenham earned a reputation as a reluctant sex symbol, as well as a nomination at the Australian Film Institute Awards. The following year, he took on the role of a philanthropic priest attempting to console lepers in
Molokai: The Story of Father Damien, once again earning an AFI nomination for Best Actor. Though subsequent performances in
Better Than Sex (2000) and
Russian Doll (2001) earned
Wenham even more critical acclaim overseas, it was his role as a transvestite playwright in director
Baz Luhrmann's
Moulin Rouge that gave the rising star his first true taste of international success. By this time, it was clear that
Wenham could carry a film, and with his turn as a mathematics wizard with an innovative plan for predicting the stock market in
The Bank, he proved this once and for all. In 2002, he followed a supporting performance in
The Crocodile Hunter: Collision Course with a role as a heroin dealer in
Pure. Later that same year,
Wenham truly found an international audience when he joined the hugely successful
The Lord of the Rings franchise as Faramir in its second installment,
The Two Towers. 2003 proved an exhaustive year for the increasingly busy actor, as he starred in the Australian slice-of-life miniseries After the Deluge and the crime comedy
Gettin' Square, for which he won the AFI award for Best Actor.
Wenham then returned to the role of Faramir in
The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King, making an even greater impression with more emotional scenes and screen time. By then,
Wenham was a recognizable international talent, and following a pair of Australian television appearances, he turned up alongside
Hugh Jackman in the 2004 action fantasy
Van Helsing. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

- 1996
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- 1996
- R
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In this Australian comedy, adapted by Louis Nowra from his own play and updated from a '70s to a '90s setting, a Sydney slacker gets the chance to stage an opera, but his cast is assembled from the ranks of the mentally ill. After a long stretch sponging off his law-student girlfriend Lucy (Rachel Griffiths), college dropout Lewis (Ben Mendelsohn) fakes his way into a job doing occupational therapy with a group of asylum inmates. Although his original assignment is to stage a variety show, manic-depressive patient Roy (Barry Otto) soon hijacks the project and convinces Lewis to helm an adaptation of his favorite opera, Mozart's Cosi Fan Tutti. Lewis' unlikely cast ranges from psycho firebug Doug (David Wenham) and scruffy loudmouth Sandra (Kerry Walker) to depressive, dirt-obsessed Ruth (Pamela Rabe) and self-effacing drug addict Julie (Toni Collette). Given the dearth of acting and singing experience among these players, Lewis opts to translate the piece from Italian to English and stage it as a play with only a few pieces of music. The show still proves to be more than its director bargained for -- despite the dubious assistance of his friend Nick (Aden Young), an actor/director who's currently staging his own over-the-top production of Diary of a Madman. Although Cosi reteams Muriel's Wedding co-stars Collette and Griffiths, their characters here never share a scene. The production also includes former Men at Work singer Colin Hay in a featured role, plus cameos from Greta Scacchi and Paul Mercurio (who appeared alongside Otto in Strictly Ballroom). ~ Brian J. Dillard, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Ben Mendelsohn, Barry Otto, (more)