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Dimanche, si loin de moi

Original title: Sunday Too Far Away
  • 1975
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 34m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
1K
YOUR RATING
Dimanche, si loin de moi (1975)
Drama

A hard-drinking but hard-working gun shearer leads a group of Outback sheep herders into striking after wealthy landowners attempt to drive them from their territory.A hard-drinking but hard-working gun shearer leads a group of Outback sheep herders into striking after wealthy landowners attempt to drive them from their territory.A hard-drinking but hard-working gun shearer leads a group of Outback sheep herders into striking after wealthy landowners attempt to drive them from their territory.

  • Director
    • Ken Hannam
  • Writer
    • John Dingwall
  • Stars
    • Jack Thompson
    • Max Cullen
    • Robert Bruning
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ken Hannam
    • Writer
      • John Dingwall
    • Stars
      • Jack Thompson
      • Max Cullen
      • Robert Bruning
    • 21User reviews
    • 28Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 5 wins & 1 nomination total

    Photos27

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    Top cast27

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    Jack Thompson
    Jack Thompson
    • Foley
    Max Cullen
    Max Cullen
    • Tim King
    Robert Bruning
    • Tom
    Jerry Thomas
    • Basher
    Peter Cummins
    • Arthur Black
    John Ewart
    John Ewart
    • Ugly
    Sean Scully
    • Beresford
    Reg Lye
    Reg Lye
    • Old Garth
    Laurie Rankin
    • Station hand
    Lisa Peers
    Lisa Peers
    • Sheila Dawson
    Gregory Apps
    Gregory Apps
    • Michael Simpson
    Doug Lihou
    • Rousie
    Ken Weaver
    • Quinn
    Curt Jansen
    • Wentworth
    Phyllis Ophel
    • Ivy
    John Charman
    • Barman
    Ken Shorter
    • Frankie Davis
    Tony Clay
    • Undertaker
    • (as Wayne Anthony)
    • Director
      • Ken Hannam
    • Writer
      • John Dingwall
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews21

    6.91K
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    Featured reviews

    8filmbufferx

    Authentic and entertaining ...

    There's a slow moving shot halfway through SUNDAY TOO FAR AWAY taken from inside the shearing shed looking through a window out into the yard. The camera pans across the yard before pulling back into the shearing shed, rising as it continues panning across the shed interior, following the action before settling on a particular character. It's a beautiful shot and a lovely example of the stunning cinematography that gives the film a palpability in which you can really feel the heat, dust and flies.

    I watched the film for the first time this evening and was blown away by its lyricism, claustrophobia and grandeur. I grew up on a dairy and sheep farm in 1970s Northern Victoria when the kind of hard working, hard talking, hard drinking labourers who travel where the work is was still very much a cultural tradition in country Australia. The people in this film display an authenticity, brashness, sense of humour, bravado, timidity and mateship that is readily recognisable. It all feels genuine. It's no wonder the film was so readily embraced by Australians on its initial release.

    Aspects of the film also reminded me of Tim Burstall's 1979 film, LAST OF THE KNUCKLEMEN in its exploration of class in a tough homosocial workplace culture. There's also a humorous bum-wiggling scene that reminded me of a shot from another Jack Thompson film, THE SUM OF US (Burton 1994) in which he is vigorously stirring a saucepan over a stove. I would not be surprised to learn that the shot in THE SUM OF US is a homage to SUNDAY TOO FAR AWAY.
    8mas36-653-39027

    A Slice of History

    A great movie reflecting the the lead up to the Shearer's strike of 1955. Jack Thompson leads a group of shearers ( not sheep hearders) and shows life on an outback station just before the 9 month long strike when the "prosperity bonus" was cancelled and shearers pay was cut.

    A great movie, made for Australians, showing how Australia was once. Highly recommended
    MDumont

    One of Austalia's best films

    This movie would definitely make my personal top ten. Along with "The Odd Angry Shot", "The Club", and "Newsfront" this is one of the highlights of that golden age of Aussie movies made in the mid 70s to the mid 80's.

    Jack Thompson is magnificent as the chief shearer (I think the technical term is "Ringer") of an itinerant gang of shearers who arrive at sheep station to work. The wonderful photography captures the heat and dust of the landscape as well as the harsh living and working conditions.

    The main dramatic event in the movie centres around a strike by the shearers and the owners attempts to break it using scab labour. In this aspect it gives a nod to the political agenda portrayed in "Newsfront". There are some great character roles by minor players, the sub plot involving the awful cook is a little gem. Which pretty much sums up the film, not a major epic or Hollywood rubbish, just a good honest well made movie that bears repeated viewing.
    10campbell-russell-a

    Authenticity - Well Bugger Me

    I am glad that I can sometimes revisit Australia as it once was through films like "Sunday Too Far Away" and "Newsfront". At the time of their making, we still had the faces and voices that rang true to the 50's - 60's prior to the influence of television that forever changed the way we talk and even the way we walk. Jack Thompson and the rest of the male cast moved in the way Australian men and, in particular, shearers moved. Compare this with the cast of "Kokoda". As my mother commented, Australian men of the 1940's just didn't look so muscular or move with such rigidity. They were a Depression generation - wiry with a casual slouch born of being raised on lean rabbits and fish and hardships that knocked pretentiousness sideways.

    However, "Sunday Too Far Away" is far more than a sentimental journey. It is a view of life that is at once tragic and humorous. It also has genuinely touching moments when seemingly hard and practical men display their concern for each other in an understated manner that is indicative of their rejection of overt displays of sentimentality. They all know that they are probably going to end up like old Garth if they remain shearers. "That's shearing for you, Foley" says Garth as he muses about the fact that he has hardly seen his wife and son for over 30 years. Garth's death is symbolic for all the shearers and their indignation at the undertaker not providing "the proper vehicle" to bear his body on his final journey reflects their insistence upon their dignity as shearers. As in the strike action, "it wasn't so much about the money as the bloody insult."

    But I intellectualize too much. I love this film for many reasons but most of all because it could have been made for people like me in mind. It is about yarns that my uncles told and characters who were like my father who had been a "rousie" on a shearing floor after leaving school at the end of year eight even though he had been the dux! Times were such that work was valued above all else - life was work.

    In the 1980's, I once rented a farmhouse when I taught in rural Australia. One of the conditions of my tenancy was that shearers would share the house in the shearing season. These shearers were tough, smelled of lanolin no matter how they washed and ate mountains of food all cooked up in a giant iron skillet. And they argued about everything - who was a gun and who was not, which cocky had treated them the worst, which type of sheep were the easiest to shear. However, when I asked them about the authenticity of "Sunday Too Far Away", they always agreed that it was the best evocation of the life of a shearer they had ever seen - praise indeed for the film.(Not that they would have used the word "evocation")
    martin-dumont

    A truely great film

    This film is what real cinema should be. A great script, great direction, great photography and great acting. Although the story is simple the character studies from the superb cast keep you glued to the screen.

    I recently put this in a competition for a personal top 10 movies of all time. I also included that other Aussie masterpiece "Newsfront".

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      A two-and-a-half (approximately 150 minute) version existed before its Sydney Film Festival Premiere. A two hour director's cut played at this Sydney Film Festival on 1 June 1975. The final release cut runs just over an hour and a half (94 minutes). Australian film historian, critic and curator Paul Brynes has said: "Thirty minutes of the original film were cut by producers, and some critics suggest the removal of important subplots might have diminished the story. The 'director's cut' has never been made available to the public."
    • Quotes

      Ivy: I don't serve scabs

    • Alternate versions
      A two hour director's cut played at the Sydney Film Festival, 1 June 1975.
    • Connections
      Featured in The Making of 'Sunday' (1975)
    • Soundtracks
      SUNDAY TOO FAR AWAY
      Written by Bob Ellis

      Performed by Jack Thompson

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    FAQ

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 12, 1977 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Australia
    • Official sites
      • South Australian Film Corporation
      • Southern Star Group
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Sunday Too Far Away
    • Filming locations
      • Carriewerloo Station, South Australia, Australia
    • Production company
      • The South Australian Film Corporation
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • A$271,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 34 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.78 : 1

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