AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,3/10
2,4 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Lauren e Ned são noivos, estão apaixonados, e têm apenas dez dias para encontrar a mãe de Lauren que fica no norte da Austrália, reunir os seus pais, e realizar o casamento dos seus sonhos.Lauren e Ned são noivos, estão apaixonados, e têm apenas dez dias para encontrar a mãe de Lauren que fica no norte da Austrália, reunir os seus pais, e realizar o casamento dos seus sonhos.Lauren e Ned são noivos, estão apaixonados, e têm apenas dez dias para encontrar a mãe de Lauren que fica no norte da Austrália, reunir os seus pais, e realizar o casamento dos seus sonhos.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Prêmios
- 1 vitória e 7 indicações no total
Avaliações em destaque
Miranda Tapsell leads us on a merry dance through all of the Northern Territory's most famous and scenic sights, from Nitmilik Gorge to Kakadu to the Tiwi Islands. There are credits to the Northern Territory Tourist Bureau, and they more than got their money's worth.
The story line is a bit predictable, but it is told with enthusiastic good nature and has a couple of less obvious twists that overall it hung together well enough that I didn't mind. It is the Miranda show and she inhabits the character so easily I wonder whether aspects of it might be slightly autobiographical. Gwilym Lee as fiancé Ned is a pleasant, slightly uncomfortable fish out of water in what to him must be such a strange environment. The extras, Aboriginal people in various places and particularly on the Tiwi Islands, give it a goodly dollop of authenticity and provides a reflective backdrop for many of the story's aspects.
In some ways, it's a bit like a visual equivalent of a musical - a not terribly plausible or important story that ties together not songs but images and impressions of Australia's Top End and the people that live there. If you've never been, this might just inspire you to go.
The story line is a bit predictable, but it is told with enthusiastic good nature and has a couple of less obvious twists that overall it hung together well enough that I didn't mind. It is the Miranda show and she inhabits the character so easily I wonder whether aspects of it might be slightly autobiographical. Gwilym Lee as fiancé Ned is a pleasant, slightly uncomfortable fish out of water in what to him must be such a strange environment. The extras, Aboriginal people in various places and particularly on the Tiwi Islands, give it a goodly dollop of authenticity and provides a reflective backdrop for many of the story's aspects.
In some ways, it's a bit like a visual equivalent of a musical - a not terribly plausible or important story that ties together not songs but images and impressions of Australia's Top End and the people that live there. If you've never been, this might just inspire you to go.
10 points for being female-written, having a largely Indigenous cast, and showcasing some beautiful parts of Australia. Unfortunately I felt the story was a bit disjointed and some of the jokes fell flat. It was an enjoyable enough movie to see on Mother's Day and Miranda Tapsell is an absolute star, but this one didn't do it for me.
This film was even better than I'd hoped for, and I smiled through much of the movie - and left feeling great!
A truly uplifting romcom showcasing some unique parts of Australia that I now really want to explore!
Excellent soundtrack.
Definitely go and see it!
Wow, what a great Australian movie, beautiful cinematography of Australia's landscape showing the beauty of the Northern Territory. The film was heartwarming and also very funny with a great message and likeable characters.
Overall, a very enjoyable Australian romantic comedy and a must watch, it was very enjoyable and is destined to become an Instant Australian classic, aswell as boosting tourism for Australia and the Northern Territory
Overall, a very enjoyable Australian romantic comedy and a must watch, it was very enjoyable and is destined to become an Instant Australian classic, aswell as boosting tourism for Australia and the Northern Territory
Why does this earn a special space in my heart? It is a romantic comedy after all, deliberately designed to be discarded. The genre is defined by the attractiveness of a superficial love; the easy way problems are resolved and the balance of designed soulmates restored.
This film follows the mandated pattern: love, some misunderstanding of clumsiness that separates the lovers, a public pronouncement of love with cheering bystanders, happy ending - often a wedding and dancing. You have to have some strong comedic, but identifiably human characters. This serves that pattern well.
But it also has a few important differences. The first is the in your face charm of the land. I am immigrating to Australia so this grabs me deeper than it will you, dear reader. But it will likely grab you too, because the rom-com device here is place-as-heart. That is usually impossible to convey cinematically: vistas are containers, situations within which you place the characters and their emotions. Even Takashi Miike's 'The Bird People in China' or the obverse film, Zhang Yimou's obverse 'Riding Alone for Thousands of Miles' can only use place as space, and then only to annotate, even when they use the mystery of place and people.
Here you have a device no other place has: the people and the place share an identity. I don't know how well this would be conveyed to someone who knows nothing of the Aborigines, but the movie completely captures the notion by bringing souls to a physical place in the context of life commitment. The driver of 'place' as an agent is largely implied, making it so much stronger.
But there's also a more intriguing notion of love than usual. As with the standard rom-com model, it is the man that is the lead and the woman that acquiesces or not. But here the guy has some novel metaphors. Here he is already committed beyond the happy closeness of an early relationship and he explains why: his life is a room half filled with boxes that mean ('contain') little and he wants the rest to be full of flowers and jewels. This is after the metaphor is set up by someone in the parallel romance. And it becomes a complaint in the big breakup scene.
But the metaphor is strange enough that it steps out of the rom-com genre far enough to register as human; love for someone coming as much from the pull of attraction (and this woman is attractive) as from the innate need for companionship.
This film follows the mandated pattern: love, some misunderstanding of clumsiness that separates the lovers, a public pronouncement of love with cheering bystanders, happy ending - often a wedding and dancing. You have to have some strong comedic, but identifiably human characters. This serves that pattern well.
But it also has a few important differences. The first is the in your face charm of the land. I am immigrating to Australia so this grabs me deeper than it will you, dear reader. But it will likely grab you too, because the rom-com device here is place-as-heart. That is usually impossible to convey cinematically: vistas are containers, situations within which you place the characters and their emotions. Even Takashi Miike's 'The Bird People in China' or the obverse film, Zhang Yimou's obverse 'Riding Alone for Thousands of Miles' can only use place as space, and then only to annotate, even when they use the mystery of place and people.
Here you have a device no other place has: the people and the place share an identity. I don't know how well this would be conveyed to someone who knows nothing of the Aborigines, but the movie completely captures the notion by bringing souls to a physical place in the context of life commitment. The driver of 'place' as an agent is largely implied, making it so much stronger.
But there's also a more intriguing notion of love than usual. As with the standard rom-com model, it is the man that is the lead and the woman that acquiesces or not. But here the guy has some novel metaphors. Here he is already committed beyond the happy closeness of an early relationship and he explains why: his life is a room half filled with boxes that mean ('contain') little and he wants the rest to be full of flowers and jewels. This is after the metaphor is set up by someone in the parallel romance. And it becomes a complaint in the big breakup scene.
But the metaphor is strange enough that it steps out of the rom-com genre far enough to register as human; love for someone coming as much from the pull of attraction (and this woman is attractive) as from the innate need for companionship.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesFilming ranged across locations including Adelaide, Darwin, Jabiru, Kakadu National Park, Katherine, Nitmiluk National Park, and the Tiwi Islands. In all places, there was important liaison with the local Aboriginal communities, the producing team ensuring that approvals were granted to film and that due respect was paid to the original owners of the lands and the current residents of the communities.
- Erros de gravaçãoAt the fuel pump, they show Trevor's 4wd being filled with diesel, when the call-outs visible on the vehicle indicate it is a '3500 v6,' the petrol/gas engine. Later in the film that same 'diesel' 4wd is put out of action when Ned puts petrol/gas in it.
- Cenas durante ou pós-créditosSubtitle immediately before closing credits: "Nearly finished. Keep ya kurrawas on ya seats..."
- ConexõesFeatured in Top End Wedding: Behind the Scenes (2019)
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- How long is Top End Wedding?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
Bilheteria
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 3.681.669
- Tempo de duração1 hora 53 minutos
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.85 : 1
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