VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,8/10
470
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaWhen a repeat offender returns to a prison after exposing abuses committed by its guards to the press, tensions boil between inmates and staff, culminating in a bloody riot.When a repeat offender returns to a prison after exposing abuses committed by its guards to the press, tensions boil between inmates and staff, culminating in a bloody riot.When a repeat offender returns to a prison after exposing abuses committed by its guards to the press, tensions boil between inmates and staff, culminating in a bloody riot.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 11 candidature totali
Tex Morton
- The Govenor
- (as Robert 'Tex' Morton)
Recensioni in evidenza
This is an excellent Australian prison movie with a great cast. Stumbled across this whilst looking for a movie to watch here and glad i did. Found out after watching it's based on true events and the real brutality that went on from prison guards mistreating inmates. Won't go into to much detail but give it a watch if you get the chance. Australian film making at it's finest from a Scotsman.
When a repeat offender returns to a prison after exposing abuses committed by its guards to the press, tensions boil between inmates and staff, culminating in a bloody riot. When a repeat offender returns to a prison after exposing abuses committed by its guards to the press, tensions boil between inmates and staff, culminating in a bloody riot.
When a repeat offender returns to a prison after exposing abuses committed by its guards to the press, tensions boil between inmates and staff, culminating in a bloody riot. When a repeat offender returns to a prison after exposing abuses committed by its guards to the press, tensions boil between inmates and staff, culminating in a bloody riot.
Directed by Stephen Wallace and written by Bob Jewson, Stir stars Bryan Brown, Max Phipps, Dennis Miller, Gary Waddell and Phil Motherwell. Music is by Cameron Allan and cinematography by Geoff Burton.
Stir is a tough Australian prison drama based on the real life prison riot that occurred at Bathurst Gaol 1974. Writer Bob Jewson was an inmate at the time and draws on his observations for the screenplay.
The standard rules of prison dramas are adhered to here, sadistic guards, homosexuality (though tenderly handled and not involving rape), poor conditions etc. Where Stir lifts itself into the upper echelons of similar genre pictures is with the characterisations, they are credibly written and performed. There are a number of human interest stories running through the plot, none of which involve outsiders, which is a bonus as we all are cemented in this concrete and iron jungle. While the mounting tension is unbearable at times, headed up by the terrific Brown who is pumped with snake eyed hardness and coiled spring intensity.
Criminally under seen, Stir is as tough as steel toe-capped boots and demands to be labelled as essential viewing for those interested in penal based movies. 8/10
Stir is a tough Australian prison drama based on the real life prison riot that occurred at Bathurst Gaol 1974. Writer Bob Jewson was an inmate at the time and draws on his observations for the screenplay.
The standard rules of prison dramas are adhered to here, sadistic guards, homosexuality (though tenderly handled and not involving rape), poor conditions etc. Where Stir lifts itself into the upper echelons of similar genre pictures is with the characterisations, they are credibly written and performed. There are a number of human interest stories running through the plot, none of which involve outsiders, which is a bonus as we all are cemented in this concrete and iron jungle. While the mounting tension is unbearable at times, headed up by the terrific Brown who is pumped with snake eyed hardness and coiled spring intensity.
Criminally under seen, Stir is as tough as steel toe-capped boots and demands to be labelled as essential viewing for those interested in penal based movies. 8/10
This film is based around the wave of rioting and unrest that swept through jails in NSW in the 1970s over officer brutality and generally poor treatment. It depicts the incredible violence of the time without becoming excessively graphic and touches on situational homosexuality and other aspects of prison life realistically.
For anyone that is interested in seeing a side of Australia that doesn't get a look in that often in cinema, this is well worth a look.
For anyone that is interested in seeing a side of Australia that doesn't get a look in that often in cinema, this is well worth a look.
The title pretty much sums up, the real life tale of prisoners pushing back, at a less than uninviting prison system, with some real nasties. We see and understand, how the cons finally erupt, by way of a torching of their much loved jail. This is one of those finer Aussie dramas, written by a real life crim, actual eyes, there when the whole Bathurst insanity went down. The actors who breathe such life into their characters are wonderful, heralded of course by it's strong lead. A wonderful, entertaining 100 minutes, in a well realized and structured story, with great discipline to detail.
This film is a powerful indictment of the brutality of the Australian prison system in the 1970s, where prisoners were regularly savagely beaten in order to instil fear into the prisoners.
Bryan Brown gives another outstanding performance as 'China' Jackson, a man who has gone out on a limb to condemn the system in a television expose, but who finds himself back in the same jail, and must try to survive amidst the violence of an unfair and uncaring system.
Max Phipps is also impressive as a warder who feels guilty about how they treat the prisoners, but who fears what would happen if the prisoners were not cowed by fear.
The film is not an easy watch at times, and there is not a woman to be seen in the film, but it is a convincing argument for prison reform.
Bryan Brown gives another outstanding performance as 'China' Jackson, a man who has gone out on a limb to condemn the system in a television expose, but who finds himself back in the same jail, and must try to survive amidst the violence of an unfair and uncaring system.
Max Phipps is also impressive as a warder who feels guilty about how they treat the prisoners, but who fears what would happen if the prisoners were not cowed by fear.
The film is not an easy watch at times, and there is not a woman to be seen in the film, but it is a convincing argument for prison reform.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThis picture was one of fifty Australian films selected for preservation as part of the National Film and Sound Archive of Australia's Kodak / Atlab Cinema Collection Restoration Project.
- Curiosità sui creditiBefore the end credits: "The writer of this film was a prisoner in Bathurst Jail when rioting prisoners gutted the jail in February 1974. In writing the screenplay he drew on his own prison experiences and the findings of the enquiries into the Attica and Bathurst riots."
- ConnessioniFeatured in The Hidden History of Homosexual Australia (2005)
I più visti
Accedi per valutare e creare un elenco di titoli salvati per ottenere consigli personalizzati
- How long is Stir?Powered by Alexa
Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Sito ufficiale
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- Stir
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Budget
- 485.000 A$ (previsto)
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 41 minuti
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.75 : 1
Contribuisci a questa pagina
Suggerisci una modifica o aggiungi i contenuti mancanti
Divario superiore
By what name was Cella 23 - A un passo dalla morte (1980) officially released in India in English?
Rispondi