Inclubabu
Plot so thin, it passes unnoticed.
Skunkyrate
Gripping story with well-crafted characters
Matylda Swan
It is a whirlwind of delight --- attractive actors, stunning couture, spectacular sets and outrageous parties.
Walter Sloane
Mostly, the movie is committed to the value of a good time.
Chris Knipp
Samson and Delilah is a terribly sad and touching tale of an Australian aboriginal boy and girl. The film, which won the Caméra d'Or award at Cannes for the best first feature, and "golden camera" suits its warm, luminous images, has a long downward trajectory that rights itself just in time toward the end. There is the comfort of a moment of mild hope when the teenage couple settles, after desperate times, in a remote Outback location. We leave them at peace, the girl returning to her craft of making paintings for sale to Alice Springs galleries, the boy attempting to end his substance abuse. A romantic song declares that they will always have each other, thus underlining that this is not a tract or horror film but a love story, and that a cinema of identity is also a cinema of hope. Songs are well used, and so is light. Thornton shows a sure touch and knows how to tell a story, conveying clear messages in long wordless takes that draw you in and grab your heart.This is a first feature by a young aboriginal director, who wrote, shot, and directed (editing is bey Roland Gallois). Thornton takes us into the lives of his characters with sensitivity and delicacy, and all the vividness of an Italian neorealist film. Samson (Rowan McNamarra) lives in a nearly empty house with his brother, who spends the day out front with a little band playing the same reggae song over and over. Samson grabs a guitar and tries some riffs every day, and is chased away. He consoles himself morning and night by sniffing gasoline. He becomes attracted to Delilah (Marissa Gibson), who sleeps nearby and cares for her aging, ailing Nana (Mitjili Gibson), and spends part of each day making paintings with her. These are bought by a gallery owner for a small fee and sold in Alice Springs for tens of thousands of dollars. Deilialh also pushes her grandma in a rickety wheelchair to a ragged health center and to a chapel where she sits a while and prays.Samsom's overtures to Delilah are crude. He scribbles a message on the wall, throws stones at her, and throws his mattress over the fence into her property. Their relationship is largely wordless. When anyone around does speak, it's in aboriginal language, except to exchange a few words with The Man, in this case the gallery owner. The early encounters between the pair are rough but also playful and funny.One day follows another, though the two kids seem to be waking up closer together. Delilah amuses herself sitting in a car listening to a cassette tape of Latin music. One evening Samson does a wild, sexy dance where she can see. Eventually the morning comes when Delilah wakes up to find her grandma dead. In mourning the girl cuts off her hair with a bread knife. Higher than usual, Samson attacks one of the musicians, and is beaten. The girl is beaten with sticks too, by family members who accuse her of causing her grandma's death by misusing her or not giving her her medications.Impulsively Samson and Delilah run away to Alice Springs in a stolen truck. He siphons off a bottle of gas from a car to keep going, and begins sniffing gasoline almost continually. From then on things get worse and worse. They wind up sleeping under a bridge near a once reasonably well off aboriginal man called Gonzo (Scott Thornton) who has declined through drink. Gonzo, who has a gaiety about him, and speaks only English, provides the kids with food, mostly noodles. They shop at a grocery store and Samson steals some extras. They're close now, a couple too miserable to make love but linked by affection, always together, huddling close at night, still hardly speaking. But in this dire situation Samson's gas sniffing becomes more constant and his condition more comatose, so he barely seems to notice when Delilah is swept away in a car by white boys to be raped and beaten. She returns later under the bridge, all bloody. And it gets worse.Somehow they're rescued only to be taken back where they came, where they're beaten and chased off again for past crimes. And this is where things get better, because they drive off to Delilah's first home and find a kind of refuge.Samson and Delilah is unbearably sad and rather like a fable, yet also full of realistic detail, such as the white people in Alice Springs, and the bad conditions the aboriginals live in in the Outback. In a detailed discussion of the film and its context Richard Phillips of the World Socialist Web Site explains how recent discriminatory laws in Australia have forced aborigines out of remote settlements like the ones shown here into more crowded and urban compounds where the health and social conditions are rapidly declining. Phillips says what young aboriginals in the Outback suffer today is generally still harsher than what happens in the film. In particular he says, Thornton, for reasons of his own, doesn't show the abuse by police aboriginals suffer around Alice Springs.This film is another step toward an aboriginal cinema made by aboriginal people (in contrast to a few fine efforts by outsiders like Bruce Beresford's 1986 The Fringe Dwellers). It's very different from the beautiful but relatively escapist 2006 Ten Canoes (co-directed by Rolf de Heer and Peter Djigirr), which dramatizes a traditional fable. Both approaches to aboriginal culture and experience are valid and both stories need to be told.Included in the New Directors/New Films series co-sponsored by the Film Society of Lincoln Center and the Museum of Modern Art, New York, and screened at both MoMA and the Walter Reade Theater in March 2010.
manicman84
Samson And Delilah directed by Warwick Thornton is a visually beautiful, yet painfully straightforward portrait of young Aboriginal Australians risking their lives in an urbanized society. By avoiding the dialogue Thornton crafts an authentic and emotional film that not only meditates on love that never judges, but also showcases tough reality indigenous Australians have to face in the unfair contemporary world. Thornton makes a statement that just cannot be ignored: the clash between the two ways of living is very difficult to overcome and there's still no to little justice for those underprivileged. This bleakly authentic view gives the movie its gravitas transforming the story of love into the story of survival. Non-actors Rowan McNamara and Marissa Gibson don't really perform their roles, but lead the lives of people who have been around them. Their performances happen to be thoroughly authentic in an engrossing manner. Overall, Samson And Delilah is an original, haunting and truthful take on Aboriginal identity that must be seen.
elchileverde
I'm amazed that across the board, Aussie IMDb reviewers are hating this film. The complaint: not realistic, boring. Not a love story.OK I will agree with the last statement. I saw the preview and it's being marketed as a love story...which in a sense is kinda true, one of the most offbeat love stories I've ever seen, though tagging Samson and Delilah as a love story is misleading. This film is much more a work of art, a successful creation of experimental storytelling on film, a harsh portrayal of Aborigine life, and ultimately a dual character piece. The movie is not about making a wholly realistic story of teenage Aborigines. If you have a problem with films with no dialog, this will be boring and please head to the next Hollywood blockbuster. And be warned, this is a very sad story of poverty, drug abuse, and disconnection.I applaud the director, Warwick Thornton, who seems to be very well grounded in cinematography and documentary work in delivering us his first full-length fictional feature. Pacing was suburb, amazing shots of the Australian outback as well as executing brilliant close-ups of characters with the urban backgrounds towards the second part of the film. Very impressed by the actors as well, and how it was really their facial expressions and actions throughout the film that carried the narrative, and how we have two extremely introverted character studies and how in each characters' hardship, even though "Delilah" was much more the introvert and extremely stubborn, both their lives mirror each other and they do fall back on each other for support, even if Samson ultimately was the most dependent as he continually turns to "huffing" as his main help with his struggles.And I should also return to the point of lack of dialog and the narrative being carried on through action. There was something very primal, very human about the way the film unfolds...reminding me a lot of physical anthropologists studying the social behavior of primates...of which all of us humans are also primates. And I mean no disrespect to anyone in their beliefs or as an insult at Aborigines. I believe the director was playing on one of the most ancient human societies on Earth, as the best tool to convey a "world" where human speech is almost nonexistent at the dawn of human evolution, as if going back in time to tell an ancient and minimalist story of heartbreak juxtaposed into the familiar modern Australian backdrop. Pure brilliance...something that rarely a filmmaker can be bold enough to try, let along make work as a film!So as if this all wasn't part of the quirky charm of the movie, we have an excellent and oddball soundtrack, from Mexican mariachi, to reggae, to alt-country/folk music (this music by the director himself!) that brought this work to further heights.While Samson and Delilah might be the most tragic stories I've ever seen within film-making's "hash realism", it's also a story of love...of how one person genuinely cares for someone else as their life goes down the toilet, and in the end come a sense of blossoming and hope. Excellent work, you can see how this was very much a labor of love by Thornton. Not the most brilliant work in the world (but I do give it 10 stars), but certainly something really worthy of praise and reception by open minds!
TrevorHickman
A really good film showing the grim realities of Aboriginal life through the 'love-story' of Samson and Delilah.What really impressed me with the film was the fact that both lead roles were played by amateurs. Both played their characters incredibly and (hopefully) have long and successful acting careers ahead of them.Sure, there was little dialogue between them (Samson only says one word in the whole film) but to be honest as the film went on I grew to like this. Yes, you could argue that more dialogue would have developed their characters more, but by the end I had become comfortable with it and was glad that the director had taken this approach.The cinematography is superb and the topic both harrowing and sad.I scored the film an 8 because the last 10 minutes is basically romantic nonsense. Really the film should have finished at the car accident, but after a film that had so little light and positiveness then I can understand that it needed the solace that the 'romantic' ending gave it.