DCSIMG
 
 

Ebsen Storm Movies

 
1995  
 
A co-production of Britain's BBC, Australia's ABC and a number of children's-television concerns, Genie From Down Under boasted one of the most blatantly self-explanatory titles in TV history. Alexandra Milman starred as an English girl named Penelope, who came upon a magic opal containing two Australian genies, dad Bruce and son, Baz (sounds a bit like the American Saturday-morning offering Sigmund and the Sea Monsters). The series' two seasons were produced three years apart, in 1995 and 1998, explaining the cast changes amongst the supporting players. Twenty-six half-hour episodes of Genie From Down Under were produced in all. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

 Read More

 
1992  
 
It is a simple thing that police officer Tony Bourke has to do to regain his detective status. All he has to do is go to a remote outback town and clear the local police of any wrongdoing in the shooting of an Aboriginal suspect. After all, he himself recently suffered from being demoted because of an accidental shooting he committed while on the job. Nothing could be easier, except for one irritating little fact, which his superiors have ignored: Tony actually believes in the laws of the land. He is not prepared to whitewash the white cop's misdeeds (if that's what they are) just because they have been committed against a person of color. In this painful social drama, the tensions caused by discrimination in Australia are skillfully highlighted. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Jerome EhlersFrank Gallacher, (more)
 
1989  
 
This is the latest in a series of outdoor adventure dramas starring Australian producer and director Alby Mangels. The prophecies of a Zulu shaman send Alby on a trip to wild places in Africa, New Zealand and Australia, collecting and releasing various wild animals and (not incidentally) picking up up the occasional gorgeous dame, imparting his earthy, homespun philosophy along the way. Also giving Alby a great deal of motivating discomfort are the occasional appearances of Michelle Els, who also appeared with him in World Safari II. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi

 Read More

 
1988  
PG  
Add Young Einstein to Queue Add Young Einstein to top of Queue  
The life of legendary scientist Albert Einstein is re-imagined as a slapstick farce in this comic fantasy. Changing Einstein's country of origin from Germany to Tasmania, the film shows the scientist's eventful youth as he creates rock & roll and discovers the secret of splitting the beer atom. Director and star Yahoo Serious loads the film with slapstick comedy, absurd sight gags, and even sneaks in a romantic subplot in which Einstein courts Marie Curie. The film was a huge hit in its native Australia but a major box-office disappointment in the United States, where audiences largely ignored the display of nonstop silliness. ~ Judd Blaise, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Yahoo SeriousOdile Le Clezio, (more)
 
1988  
 
In this irreverent, off-the-wall Australian comedy, Amanda Dole is a beautiful woman who emerges from the forest in search of her parents after being raised by dingoes. She stumbles into a haunted film studio occupied by a demented doctor (Esben Storm) and his disabled, daffy wife (Arna-Maria Winchester). David Argue plays the inept hero who tries to keep himself and the Dingo Girl one step ahead of vampires, Nazis, a crooked cop, and other urban nightmares. This campy comedy became a cult classic. ~ Dan Pavlides, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
David ArgueAmanda Dole, (more)
 
1988  
 
Add Devil's Hill to Queue Add Devil's Hill to top of Queue  
Bullying city-dweller Sam and his laid-back cousin Badge learn to settle their differences while searching the bush for a missing cow, and gain a newfound respect for one another in this family-oriented adventure from Australia. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

 Read More

 
1987  
R  
Essentially a showcase for the talents of Australian comedian Barry Humphries, this earthy comedy tells the tale of a boorish and boozy Aussie ambassador and his wife (Humphries plays both characters) who are stationed in a Middle Eastern country. There, they end up saving the world from the bio-hazard engineered by the nefarious Dr. Herpes. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Barry HumphriesPamela Stephenson, (more)
 
1986  
 
The two-part, two-hour Australian miniseries Alice to Nowhere was adapted by David Boutland from the suspense novel by Evan Green. Set in 1954, the story focused on the aftermath of a botched attempt to steal the crown jewels. Rosey Jones starred as Nurse Barbara Dean, who, unaware that a valuable necklace has been planted on her, is pursued into the Australian outback by a pair of sadistic criminals named Johnny Parson (John Waters) and Frog Gardiner (Esben Storm). As the two crooks grow more evil and irredeemable with each passing day, they leave a trail of terror and death behind them -- with even more horror still to come for the hapless heroine. Debuting June 30, 1986, Alice to Nowhere was co-produced by 10 Network and Crawford Productions. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

 Read More

 
1985  
 
In this standard movie about a young doctor wandering across the U.S. in search of his lost ideals, Richard Moir is David Trueman, someone who has dreams of going to South America to practice medicine among the disenfranchised. Trueman does go, but after he arrives he encounters enough corruption and oppression to drive him out of there -- and into drugs. He decides to travel around the U.S., at a loss with himself and society, and eventually he meets Mary (Jo Kennedy), a young heroin addict who shares his angst about life. As the two commiserate, their bleak outlook lightens up a little, promising some fairer weather in the future. Jo Kennedy received a "Best Actress" Silver Bear award at the 1985 Berlin Film Festival for her portrayal of Mary. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Richard MoirJo Kennedy, (more)
 
1985  
R  
Add The Coca-Cola Kid to Queue Add The Coca-Cola Kid to top of Queue  
The ugly American bullying his way through a foreign country was a subject for comedy in several films of the 1980s, most notably Bill Forsyth's Local Hero and this film from exiled Yugoslavian director Dusan Makavejev. Eric Roberts plays Becker, an aggressive marketing executive for the Coca-Cola Company; he has been assigned to figure out why sales in hot and dry Australia aren't higher. Becker comes up against a low-key but formidable adversary, T. George McDowell (Bill Kerr), whose homegrown soda has cornered the market in his little corner of the country. Complicating matters is Terri, a local woman (Greta Scacchi) Becker hires as his secretary; she's McDowell's daughter and a single mom who's romantically attracted to the brash American. Becker wants to make a deal on his (and his employer's) terms, but he finds himself falling prey to the charms of life Down Under and the ministrations of Terri. ~ Tom Wiener, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Eric RobertsGreta Scacchi, (more)
 
1983  
 
Three young women contend with the rougher side of night (and day) life in the big city of Sydney as one of them gets ready to take off on a flight to New York. The women go to nightclubs, bars, and the beach, they trip out on drugs, one tries to land a job, another tries prostitution for a short while, and through it all, the friends alternately argue and make up -- all within an 18-hour span of time. A tragic postscript to the film: actress Vera Plevnik who played one of the three women (Jane) was killed in a car crash not long after the movie was completed. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Tracy MannDavid Argue, (more)
 
1983  
 
This film about Stanley (Peter Bensley), a young man clashing with the real world around him, loses its potential for energetic farce and social comedy as many of the scenes are not convincingly delivered - or miss altogether. Stanley's father is a billionaire who is driven to distraction by his eccentric son and as a remedy for the young man's erratic behavior, he proposes brain surgery. Stanley is not eccentric enough to agree with that idea, and runs away to safety in the home of a normal family, or so he thinks. The "normal" father is actually gay but is still deeply ensconced in the closet as far as his family is concerned, the mother is having a hetero affair, the son is a drug dealer, and the daughter is expecting a racially-mixed child. As long as he stays with this family, Stanley's road to normalcy will be a bumpy if not aborted ride. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Graham KennedyNell Campbell, (more)
 
1982  
 
The trial of three men in the bombing of a Hilton Hotel in Sidney in 1978 serves as the general focus for this docudrama on the nature of prejudice and justice. After the hotel bombing, authorities suggested that non-Indian members of a Hindu sect called Ananda Marga (path of bliss) had done the deed -- which killed a few people, including a policeman, but did not harm any of the Commonwealth Nations' delegates at the hotel at the time. About a year later, a paid police informant accused three members of the evangelical Hindu sect of making a bomb to kill a right-wing politico. The police arrested the men, a trial ensued with much conflicting evidence, and the trio was acquitted because of a hung jury. As noted at the end of the movie, in a second trial six months later, the men were convicted and sentenced to long prison terms. Several noted Australian actors such as Tony Barry, Max Cullen, Chris Haywood, and Richard Moir) were cast as the attorneys, defendants, and detectives in this drama directed by Esben Storm. Years later, after many appeals, the fact that the whole trial was based on manufactured evidence and that the men were innocent came to light. They were chosen as scapegoats because of their participation in an unpopular religious sect. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Scott BurgessJohn Ley, (more)
 
1982  
 
Monkey Grip is a frank portrayal of a year in the life of a divorced mother (Noni Hazlehurst) living in Melbourne, trying to cope with her daughter and her own relationship with a drug addict while trying to get into the music business. ~ John Bush, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Colin FrielsAlice Garner, (more)
 
1978  
 
In this Australian drama, a man serves his six-year prison sentence for participating in a robbery and then tries to return home after his release. His former crime partners are waiting for him and angrily beat him up because he doesn't know where the loot from their last robbery is hidden. The hitchhiking ex-con is picked up by a mentally unstable model driving a 1938 sedan. Once they arrive, he learns that his mother has killed herself and that his girl friend has mysteriously disappeared. After that he and the model set out to find her. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Chris Hayward
 
1975  
 
Two documentaries which incorporate Australian Aboriginal myth and practice are combined here into one film, directed by Mike Edols, with the cooperation of an elder of the Aboriginal Worora tribe, Sam Woolagoodja. In Dreamtime, the stories of the Wandjinas -- who the Aborigines believe created their people -- and Namaaraalee -- a member of the Wandjina tribe who gave the tribal laws to the Worora -- are reenacted as Sam narrates in his own language to his son and granddaughter. The film is shot at the sacred site which embodies the story being told. The subtitles were respectfully translated from Worora and composed in English with the help of a professor of linguistics (Michael Silverstein) and a noted Sydney poet (Andrew Huntley). The second documentary Thistime contrasts the ancient ways of living with life in a resettlement camp. Sam Woolagoodja makes an eloquent and impassioned plea for his people to revive their ancient ways. Both films are rare, unsensationalistic glimpses into the lives of these poorly understood native peoples of Australia. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi

 Read More

 
1974  
 
In this Australian drama, an alcoholic becomes so desperate to dry out that he voluntarily checks himself into a mental ward. Things get sticky when he has trouble getting along with one of his male nurses and ends up being held there against his will for being "uncooperative." ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

 Read More

 
1972  
PG  
A Seminole Indian and Vietnam veteran suffering from post-traumatic stress syndrome uses his cold-blooded companions to seek vengeance against the people who killed his father in this horrific frightener from director William Grefe. Tim Ochopee (Chris Robinson) has been deeply scarred by his battlefield experiences. Upon finishing his tour of duty and returning to his home in the Everglades, all Tim wants is to live peacefully in the wilderness with his pet snake "Stanley." Upon discovering that his father has been killed under suspicious circumstances, however, Tim finds Stanley a mate and begins breeding the pair. Before long, Tim has a shack full of hungry snakes just waiting for a decent meal. That meal comes when Tim decides to sick his slithering friends in slimy snakeskin manufacturer Richard Thompkins (Alex Rocco). Infuriated that Tim would refuse his offer to purchase the snakes and transform them into tacky apparel, Thompkins hires a psychotic hitman (Paul Avery) to put the snake-loving vet in the ground. But Thompkins and his volatile gun for hire have underestimated the unusual bond that Tim shares with his snakes. Now, as Tim and his serpents come out to play, the poison begins to flow and the screaming starts. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

 Read More