Travelling Light (2003 film)

Travelling Light
Directed byKathryn Millard
Written byKathryn Millard
Produced byHelen Bowden
StarringPia Miranda
Sacha Horler
Brett Stiller
CinematographyTristan Milani
Edited byStephen Evans
Music byRichard Vella
Release date
  • 2003 (2003)
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish
Box officeA$54,619 (Australia)[1]

Travelling Light is a 2003 Australian film directed by Kathryn Millard and starring Pia Miranda, Sacha Horler, and Brett Stiller.[2]

Horler won an Australian Film Institute award as Best Supporting Actress for her role in the film.

Cast

Reception

Sandra Hall in the Sydney Morning Herald asks "So how can they still get the timing so wrong?" and writes "More eloquent is Millard's visual style. She and her cinematographer, Tristan Millani, use saturated colour and wide angles to suggest the sensation of being stranded in a landscape which goes on forever."[2] It got 1 1/2 stars in the Herald Sun which said "You're scratching for something good to say about a movie when all you can commend it on is its camerawork." and that "Travelling Light is all head and no heart, a self-indulgent slab of artsy dithering concerned only with intellectualising a storyline that doesn't bear thinking about in the first place."[3] The Daily Telegraph's Vicky Roach gave it 2 1/2 stars finishing "For a film about getting rid of unnecessary baggage, Travelling Light feels strangely unresolved."[4] The Courier Mail's Des Partridge also gave it 2 1/2 stars. He writes "While it is a solidly made film, the characters and their problems have been ploughed over in so many Australian-made dramas that there's a lack of freshness."[5]

Awards

References

  1. ^ "Australian Films at the Australian Box Office", Film Victoria accessed 13 November 2012
  2. ^ a b Sandra Hall (11 September 2003). "Travelling Light". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 16 November 2012.
  3. ^ "meandering sisters get hopelessly lost", Herald Sun, 11 September 2003
  4. ^ Roach, Vicky (11 September 2003), "Sex and drugs rock the suburbs", The Daily Telegraph
  5. ^ Partridge, Des (13 September 2003), "Back to Adelaide in the 1970s", The Courier Mail
  6. ^ Coslovich, Gabriella (22 November 2003), "Australia's stars use spotlight to act up in the national interest", The Age
  7. ^ a b c Maddox, Garry (20 November 2003), "It could be the night they get square", The Sydney Morning Herald