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The Tracker (2002 film)

2002 Australian drama film


Summary

2002 Australian drama film

FieldValue
nameThe Tracker
imageThe Tracker poster.jpg
captionTheatrical film poster
directorRolf de Heer
producerRolf de Heer
Julie Ryan
writerRolf de Heer
starring{{Plain list
musicGraham Tardif
cinematographyIan Jones
editingTania Nehme
distributorUmbrella Entertainment
released
runtime98 minutes
countryAustralia
languageEnglish
grossA$818,388 (Australia)

Julie Ryan

  • Gary Sweet
  • David Gulpilil
  • Damon Gameau The Tracker is a 2002 Australian Western directed and written by Rolf de Heer and starring David Gulpilil, Gary Sweet and Damon Gameau. It is set in 1922 in outback Australia where a colonial policeman (Sweet) uses the tracking ability of an Indigenous Australian tracker (Gulpilil) to find the alleged murderer of a white woman.

Plot

In 1922, in the Australian outback, an Aboriginal tracker (The Tracker) leads three white men (The Fanatic, The Follower, and The Veteran) in the search for an Aboriginal man (The Fugitive) accused of the murder of a white woman. Along the way, they encounter a group of Aboriginal men and women, with one wearing the uniform of a tracker. After a tense interrogation, the Aboriginals are shot and hanged. The incident leaves The Follower visibly distraught, although The Fanatic tries to justify their actions. From this point, the local Aboriginals begin to take retribution on the group. They first spear their packhorse, which falls off a cliff. With the loss of their supplies; The Veteran tries to convince The Fanatic to turn back, yet he remains adamant about capturing The Fugitive.

As the group continues, The Fanatic begins to become suspicious of The Tracker. When The Tracker leaves the camp one night to find bush tucker, The Fanatic has him chained on his return. Although The Fanatic is distrustful of The Tracker, he has The Tracker show The Follower how he tracks to prove him wrong.

When The Veteran is speared, the group is initially oblivious until alerted by The Tracker who heard it. As a result of his injury, The Veteran lags behind the others and The Fanatic attempts to leave him behind. The Follower resists this idea until The Fanatic points a pistol at him. The group is then stopped by The Tracker, who refuses to move until The Veteran catches up, even when whipped and threatened by The Fanatic. At night, The Fanatic kills The Veteran while everyone sleeps, unaware that he is being watched by The Tracker. After giving Catholic absolution to The Veteran, The Tracker gains a new level of respect from The Follower.

Still in chains held by The Fanatic, The Tracker purposely falls into a watering hole where he attempts to drown The Fanatic, yet both survive. After another horse is speared and flees, the group comes across a group of Aboriginals. The Fanatic quickly begins shooting, killing an elder and child. He is stopped by The Follower, who disarms The Fanatic and places him in chains. After The Follower is knocked out after eating spiked bush tucker at night, The Tracker alone organizes a British-style court to try The Fanatic for murder. He subsequently hangs him and hits his own head with a rock until he bleeds to make The Follower think that local Aboriginals attacked and hanged The Fanatic.

After awakening, The Follower and The Tracker continue their search for The Fugitive until surrounded by Aboriginals. Disarmed, they are led to a group of elders where The Fugitive is also being held. Although The Tracker convinces The Follower that he is innocent of the accused crimes, he carries out Aboriginal justice by spearing The Fugitive in the thigh for the crime of having raped a woman earlier in the film. Returning to camp, they find the body of The Fanatic missing. Bidding The Follower farewell, The Tracker rides off towards his country.

Cast

  • David Gulpilil as The Tracker
  • Gary Sweet as The Fanatic
  • Damon Gameau as The Follower
  • Grant Page as The Veteran
  • Noel Wilton as The Fugitive

Production

The film was shot in the semi-arid, rugged Arkaroola Sanctuary, in South Australia's Flinders Ranges. De Heer used an intentionally small film crew, saying that "It's all a much better process ...". Lyrics of the soundtrack (written by De Heer) form part of the narrative, and are sung by Archie Roach with music composed by Graham Tardif.

Peter Coad, an artist from South Australia, was hired by de Heer to create paintings that intercut the film to portray the brutal actions not shown. As preliminary work, Coad spent a month in Arkaroola. In total 14 paintings appear in the film, each painted on location in the same ratio used in the film, 1:2. Paul Byrnes, curator of the National Film and Sound Archive's Australian Screen, wrote that this artistic choice was to "disrupt the place that violent scenes usually occupy in violent cinema – there is no payoff for the viewer who wants the thrill of gore. Instead, each killing becomes a kind of instant history."

Reception

On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes the film has a score of based on reviews from critics, with an average rating. Based on 16 critics on Metacritic, the film have a score of 71 out of a 100, indicating "generally favorable reviews".

Film critic Roger Ebert gave the film three-and-a-half stars out of four calling the film "haunting" and the performances "powerful". David Stratton described the film as "remarkable". Walter Addiego of the San Francisco Chronicle wrote "See the film mainly for the quiet and powerful work of Gulpilil in the title role". Slant Magazines Jay Antani was quoted saying "The Tracker is the first significant movie to find its way into American theaters in 2005".

Jane Lydon of the University of Western Australia wrote critically of the film in 2004, saying that as an allegory to frontier violence it simplifies Australian history by constructing a "manichaean opposition between the brutal white trooper and his saintly Aboriginal victim." She also argued that "in representing colonialism as an 'old, unhappy, far-off thing', [The Tracker] ultimately releases us, modern Australian viewers, from responsibility to acknowledge the larger, and continuing effects of colonization in our own time’".

Awards and nominations

AwardsCategorySubjectResult
AACTA Awards
(2002 AFI Awards)Best FilmJulie Ryan
Rolf de Heer
Best Direction
Best Original Screenplay
Best ActorDavid Gulpilil
Best EditingTania Nehme
Best CinematographyIan Jones
ARIA AwardBest Original Soundtrack AlbumGraham Tardif
ASSG AwardBest Sound
AWGIE AwardBest Film - Original ScreenplayRolf de Heer
Cinemanila International Film FestivalBest ActorDavid Gulpilil
FCCA AwardsBest FilmJulie Ryan
Rolf de Heer
Best Director
Best Screenplay
Best ActorDavid Gulpilil
Best EditingTania Nehme
Best CinematographyIan Jones
Best Music ScoreGraham Tardif
Ghent International Film FestivalGrand Prix AwardRolf de Heer
Best Screenplay
Inside Film AwardsBest Feature FilmJulie Ryan
Rolf de Heer
Best Direction
Best Script
Best ActorDavid Gulpilil
Best MusicGraham Tardif
Best CinematographyIan Jones
Best Sound
Paris Film FestivalPress AwardRolf de Heer
Screen Music AwardBest Original SongGraham Tardif
Valladolid International Film FestivalJury Special PrizeRolf de Heer
Golden Spike Award
Venice Film FestivalSIGNIS Award - Honorable Mention
Golden Lion

Soundtrack

A Soundtrack was released in August 2002. The album is credited to Australian musician Archie Roach on vocals. The songs and music were composed by Graham Tardif. The soundtrack won best soundtrack at the 2002 Film Critics Circle of Australia.

At the ARIA Music Awards of 2002, the album was nominated for ARIA Award for Best Original Soundtrack, Cast or Show Album

;Track listing

  1. "Wide Open Spaces" (instrumental) - 1:20
  2. "Far Away Home" - 3:41
  3. "Trouble Coming" - 2:22
  4. "Approaching" (instrumental) - 0:29
  5. "My People" - 3:49
  6. "After the Valley of Sorrow" (instrumental) - 0:29
  7. "All Men Choose the Path They Follow" - 5:16
  8. "Walk to Destiny" (instrumental) - 1:45
  9. "The Chain" - 2:18
  10. "A Spear" (instrumental) - 1:05
  11. "Contradiction" - 2:02
  12. "Life Matters" - 0:44
  13. "Friction" (instrumental) - 1:15
  14. "Gungalaria" - 3:16
  15. "Hanging Tree" (instrumental) - 0:40
  16. "My History" - 3:45
  17. "Drowning" (instrumental) - 2:02
  18. "Hope Always" - 4:27

Charts

Chart (2002)Peak
positionAustralian Albums (ARIA)
171

Release history

CountryDateFormatLabelCatalogueAustralia
August 2002{{flat listMushroom Records334932

References

References

  1. "Australian Films at the Australian Box Office". Film Victoria.
  2. Wilson, Jake. (January 2003). "Looking Both Ways: The Tracker".
  3. "Production Notes (The Tracker)". [[Vertigo Entertainment.
  4. Ebert, Robert. (2006). "Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook 2007". Andrews McMeel Publishing.
  5. "Peter Coad Art – Artist – Australian".
  6. Bullock, Marita. (2016-09-01). "Screen memories: film’s knowing and historical trauma in The Tracker". Studies in Australasian Cinema.
  7. "Curator's notes The Tracker (2002) on ASO - Australia's audio and visual heritage online".
  8. "The Tracker".
  9. "The Tracker".
  10. "The Tracker". Chicago Sun-Times.
  11. Stratton, David. (4 March 2002). "The Tracker".
  12. Addiego, Walter. (19 March 2004). "Film Clips/Also opening today". [[San Francisco Chronicle]].
  13. (24 February 2005). "Review: The Tracker".
  14. "The Tracker Soundtrack Audio CD - performed by Archie Roach".
  15. "ARIA Awards – History: Winners by Year 2002: 16th Annual ARIA Awards". [[Australian Recording Industry Association]] (ARIA).
  16. "Archie Roach ARIA Chart history (to 2024)". ARIA.
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