Quando un uomo torna nella sua città natale sulla spiaggia in Australia, viene umiliato davanti al figlio adolescente da un gruppo di surfisti locali che rivendicano la proprietà della spiag... Leggi tuttoQuando un uomo torna nella sua città natale sulla spiaggia in Australia, viene umiliato davanti al figlio adolescente da un gruppo di surfisti locali che rivendicano la proprietà della spiaggia isolata della sua infanzia.Quando un uomo torna nella sua città natale sulla spiaggia in Australia, viene umiliato davanti al figlio adolescente da un gruppo di surfisti locali che rivendicano la proprietà della spiaggia isolata della sua infanzia.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 2 candidature totali
Nicholas Cassim
- The Bum
- (as Nic Cassim)
James Bingham
- Runt 1
- (as James Edward Bingham)
Brenda Meaney
- Helen
- (voce)
Recensioni in evidenza
The story unfolds with Cage arriving at a beach that holds great significance to him. However, when he's ridiculed and forbidden from surfing there with his son, it triggers a series of events that progressively detach from reality, leaving the audience to question even the reality we a witnessing.
One aspect I appreciate is the exploration of the sunken cost fallacy, the tendency to persist with an endeavor we've invested in, even if the current costs outweigh the benefits. Having recently faced a similar decision, I understand how challenging it is to step back and accept a loss.
Watching this in the GL Theatre with Cage and the rest of the crew was a very enjoyable experience.😄
One aspect I appreciate is the exploration of the sunken cost fallacy, the tendency to persist with an endeavor we've invested in, even if the current costs outweigh the benefits. Having recently faced a similar decision, I understand how challenging it is to step back and accept a loss.
Watching this in the GL Theatre with Cage and the rest of the crew was a very enjoyable experience.😄
Being married to an Australian surfer in his late sixties we found this movie pathetic. The script, the culture, the acting. There was nothing good to say about this movie except Nicholas Chae managed to see most Australia native animals. A thing that many Australians would never see.
My husband grew up surfing through the 60s and 70s and still surfs today. It is sad to see this movie represent the Australian culture this way. It may be what happens in America. Yes there was localism, bullies and drugs, but never to this extreme. To make it look like a cult initiation is so far from anything I have ever experienced.
An hour and a half of our lives we will never get back.
My husband grew up surfing through the 60s and 70s and still surfs today. It is sad to see this movie represent the Australian culture this way. It may be what happens in America. Yes there was localism, bullies and drugs, but never to this extreme. To make it look like a cult initiation is so far from anything I have ever experienced.
An hour and a half of our lives we will never get back.
Watching Nicolas Cage spiral into madness has become something of a cinematic ritual-equal parts thrilling and unnerving.
In "The Surfer," directed by Lorcan Finnegan (Vivarium, Nocebo), that descent reaches new, sun-scorched depths. Cage's performance is as unhinged as it is calculated, delivering the kind of mesmerizing chaos only he can pull off.
But the question lingers: is it entertainment, or is it a warning?
After his sinister turn in "Longlegs," Cage reemerges here as a man simply trying to surf-only to be swallowed by a surreal psychological vortex on a seemingly idyllic Australian beach.
His protagonist, a nameless Surfer, returns to the coast of his youth, hoping to reclaim something pure, maybe even sacred. Instead, he runs afoul of a bizarrely authoritarian group of beach bullies led by the menacing Scally (played with eerie charisma by Julian McMahon).
What follows is not just confrontation-it's ritualistic humiliation and mental disintegration.
Finnegan constructs a sadistic fever dream where the beach becomes a battleground for the soul.
The parking lot-a space so ordinary-mutates into a nightmarish cage. Days blur into one another as the Surfer is stripped of every material attachment: his car, his phone, his designer watch, even his surfboard.
Starving, dehydrated, dirtied, and alone, he's forced to reckon with what he needs versus what he wants.
At its core, "The Surfer" is a grotesque satire of community and masculinity, where the desire to belong becomes a gateway to destruction.
It's a violent allegory for modern identity crises-particularly male identity in an age where digital connection often replaces genuine human bonds. The film flirts with primal themes: dominance, submission, survival, and the illusion of control.
It's almost comically extreme at times, but the humor is bitter, absurd, and often laced with horror.
Finnegan's Australia is vast and unforgiving-a place where the sea offers both escape and punishment. The landscape itself seems to mock the protagonist, serving as a mirror to his fractured ego.
The beach, once a symbol of freedom and youth, becomes a metaphysical arena for transformation. Women are notably absent, or at best peripheral, making the film's world a testosterone-fueled echo chamber that both critiques and indulges in its themes.
"The Surfer"'s journey isn't just physical-it's spiritual. He devolves, then transforms.
The brutal initiation into Scally's tribal gang might represent a search for meaning, a surrender to something primal in an over-sanitized, disconnected world. "You must suffer to surf," he proclaims-a mantra that suggests transcendence through pain. But the price is steep, and the reward ambiguous.
By the film's end, "the Surfer" has been stripped bare-of status, ego, and self-deception. What remains is either a reborn man or a hollow shell.
In interviews, Finnegan has described the film as an exploration of "masculinity in crisis," emphasizing how men can be manipulated into degrading rituals in pursuit of validation and belonging.
"The Surfer" doesn't just chronicle ego death-it explores the seductive, often terrifying power of group identity and the primal longing to be part of something greater.
Visually striking and psychologically punishing, "The Surfer" isn't a movie for all or most tastes. It demands patience and interpretive effort from its audience, but it rewards those willing to ride its chaotic wave.
Finnegan delivers a nightmare worth enduring-one that sticks to the skin like sand and saltwater long after the credits roll.
In "The Surfer," directed by Lorcan Finnegan (Vivarium, Nocebo), that descent reaches new, sun-scorched depths. Cage's performance is as unhinged as it is calculated, delivering the kind of mesmerizing chaos only he can pull off.
But the question lingers: is it entertainment, or is it a warning?
After his sinister turn in "Longlegs," Cage reemerges here as a man simply trying to surf-only to be swallowed by a surreal psychological vortex on a seemingly idyllic Australian beach.
His protagonist, a nameless Surfer, returns to the coast of his youth, hoping to reclaim something pure, maybe even sacred. Instead, he runs afoul of a bizarrely authoritarian group of beach bullies led by the menacing Scally (played with eerie charisma by Julian McMahon).
What follows is not just confrontation-it's ritualistic humiliation and mental disintegration.
Finnegan constructs a sadistic fever dream where the beach becomes a battleground for the soul.
The parking lot-a space so ordinary-mutates into a nightmarish cage. Days blur into one another as the Surfer is stripped of every material attachment: his car, his phone, his designer watch, even his surfboard.
Starving, dehydrated, dirtied, and alone, he's forced to reckon with what he needs versus what he wants.
At its core, "The Surfer" is a grotesque satire of community and masculinity, where the desire to belong becomes a gateway to destruction.
It's a violent allegory for modern identity crises-particularly male identity in an age where digital connection often replaces genuine human bonds. The film flirts with primal themes: dominance, submission, survival, and the illusion of control.
It's almost comically extreme at times, but the humor is bitter, absurd, and often laced with horror.
Finnegan's Australia is vast and unforgiving-a place where the sea offers both escape and punishment. The landscape itself seems to mock the protagonist, serving as a mirror to his fractured ego.
The beach, once a symbol of freedom and youth, becomes a metaphysical arena for transformation. Women are notably absent, or at best peripheral, making the film's world a testosterone-fueled echo chamber that both critiques and indulges in its themes.
"The Surfer"'s journey isn't just physical-it's spiritual. He devolves, then transforms.
The brutal initiation into Scally's tribal gang might represent a search for meaning, a surrender to something primal in an over-sanitized, disconnected world. "You must suffer to surf," he proclaims-a mantra that suggests transcendence through pain. But the price is steep, and the reward ambiguous.
By the film's end, "the Surfer" has been stripped bare-of status, ego, and self-deception. What remains is either a reborn man or a hollow shell.
In interviews, Finnegan has described the film as an exploration of "masculinity in crisis," emphasizing how men can be manipulated into degrading rituals in pursuit of validation and belonging.
"The Surfer" doesn't just chronicle ego death-it explores the seductive, often terrifying power of group identity and the primal longing to be part of something greater.
Visually striking and psychologically punishing, "The Surfer" isn't a movie for all or most tastes. It demands patience and interpretive effort from its audience, but it rewards those willing to ride its chaotic wave.
Finnegan delivers a nightmare worth enduring-one that sticks to the skin like sand and saltwater long after the credits roll.
Because of the trailer I expected an almost Liam Neeson style thriller of bad guys at the beach terrorizing a father and son as they bond over surfing.
This is a very different film than that.
This film is surreal, psychological, introspective, and a little bit funny. You know as much of the plot as you need to, and other reviews cover the details, but I'm here to tell you to not expect a typical action or thriller.
Above all, the cinematography shines. More than the plot, the experience of seeing and hearing this movie is so compelling that I recommend seeing this in theaters. Absolutely a well made film, technically speaking.
It does not hold your hand as you're left stranded on the beach with a delirious Nic Cage. I asked a lot of questions as events unfolded, feeling as sunbaked and dehydrated as an American in the Australian sun, but I enjoyed every second of it!
This is a very different film than that.
This film is surreal, psychological, introspective, and a little bit funny. You know as much of the plot as you need to, and other reviews cover the details, but I'm here to tell you to not expect a typical action or thriller.
Above all, the cinematography shines. More than the plot, the experience of seeing and hearing this movie is so compelling that I recommend seeing this in theaters. Absolutely a well made film, technically speaking.
It does not hold your hand as you're left stranded on the beach with a delirious Nic Cage. I asked a lot of questions as events unfolded, feeling as sunbaked and dehydrated as an American in the Australian sun, but I enjoyed every second of it!
My daughter took me to see this movie as an 02 freebie and we weren't sure what to expect. We still weren't really sure what we thought after we had seen it either but it wasn't good. I am an avid movie fan and thought the acting, cinematography and location were all superb. There is definitely an interesting idea of a story somewhere in here but it never really manages to emerge. The movie seems to drift between several different possible storylines and or outcomes. You keep hoping there will be a moment of revelation that explains it all, but that just doesn't really happen.
My advice, would be don't bother, there are better things to do with a couple of hours nearly, like cleaning an oven.
My advice, would be don't bother, there are better things to do with a couple of hours nearly, like cleaning an oven.
2025 SXSW Film & TV Festival Cheat Sheet
2025 SXSW Film & TV Festival Cheat Sheet
Get the lowdown on the buzziest films we screened in Austin, including Jenna Ortega in Death of a Unicorn, the dark comedy Friendship, and more movies you'll want to add to your Watchlist.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizAt the screening at Glasgow Film Festival 25, director Lorcan Finnegan said that the snake featured in the film bit Nicolas Cage on the hand for real.
- ConnessioniFeatured in The 7PM Project: Episodio datato 16 maggio 2025 (2025)
- Colonne sonoreAsking For It (Arveene Remix)
written by Ria Rua & Arveene
performed by Ria Rua
courtesy of: Smash Factor Records
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paesi di origine
- Sito ufficiale
- Lingue
- Celebre anche come
- Серфер
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 1.306.597 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 698.114 USD
- 4 mag 2025
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 2.085.577 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 40 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 2.39 : 1
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