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IMDbPro

Siam Sunset

  • 1999
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 31m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
1.3K
YOUR RATING
Siam Sunset (1999)
Dark ComedySatireSlapstickAdventureComedyRomance

A British man with a peculiar curse goes on a low-rent bus tour in Australia.A British man with a peculiar curse goes on a low-rent bus tour in Australia.A British man with a peculiar curse goes on a low-rent bus tour in Australia.

  • Director
    • John Polson
  • Writers
    • Max Dann
    • Andrew Knight
    • Jan Marnell
  • Stars
    • Linus Roache
    • Danielle Cormack
    • Ian Bliss
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    1.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • John Polson
    • Writers
      • Max Dann
      • Andrew Knight
      • Jan Marnell
    • Stars
      • Linus Roache
      • Danielle Cormack
      • Ian Bliss
    • 14User reviews
    • 23Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 6 wins & 8 nominations total

    Photos40

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    Top cast30

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    Linus Roache
    Linus Roache
    • Perry Roberts
    Danielle Cormack
    Danielle Cormack
    • Grace
    Ian Bliss
    Ian Bliss
    • Martin
    Roy Billing
    Roy Billing
    • Bill Leach
    Alan Brough
    Alan Brough
    • Stuart Quist
    Rebecca Hobbs
    • Jane
    Terry Kenwrick
    • Arthur Droon
    Deidre Rubenstein
    • Celia Droon
    Peter Hosking
    Peter Hosking
    • Roy Wentworth
    Victoria Eagger
    • Rowena Wentworth
    Robert Menzies
    • Eric
    Eliza Lovell
    • Michelle
    Heidi Glover
    • Stephanie Droon
    Lachlan Standing
    • Ben Wentworth
    Esme Melville
    • Dot
    Choung Dao
    • Mr Nguyen
    Alan Lovell
    • Stan Porter
    Victoria Hill
    Victoria Hill
    • Maree Roberts
    • Director
      • John Polson
    • Writers
      • Max Dann
      • Andrew Knight
      • Jan Marnell
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews14

    6.41.3K
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    Featured reviews

    Steve-176

    mixed

    The latest Australian film Siam Sunset is a mixed bag, a blend of styles and ideas, often attractive and entertaining but as a whole pretty sloppy. But there's enough there to ensure a pretty rosy sunset.

    An English paint technologist (that's new!), miserable after the on screen, bizarre, death of his wife (remember this is a comedy) wins a bus tour from Adelaide to Darwin. The other tourists are ugly Aussies.

    Once the quirky Australian flavour is established, most effectively by Roy Billing as Bill Leach the tour bus operator from hell, predictably, the tour becomes a comic nightmare, and a rather formulaic one in spite of some surprising plot details.

    The English fish out of water in our bush theme has become something of a tradition in recent Australian films. Oscar And Lucinda, Welcome To Woop Woop, Sirens and even Priscilla Queen Of The Desert where the proper, effete and English Terrence Stamp drag queen tries to make sense of outback customs spring to mind.

    Getting back to nature, or at least nearly perishing in the Australian desert seems to be considered to be a sure way to personal growth according to this genre. And not just for foreigners.

    On this particular bus to hell, an Australian Vietnamese, an atrocious singer songwriter, a masculine female army reservist, an overbearing tour bus operator, assorted be holidayed subrubanites and an urban lass on the run, face comic, sometimes ghastly dusty terror and learn from the experience.

    But for the most part the bit players aren't afforded enough interest by first time feature director John Polsen. They're just character bit players in a film full of bit playing plot elements.

    Danielle Cormack (the pregnant lead in Topless Women Talk About Their Lives) plays Grace, the female foil for our pommie paint specialist Perry played by Linus Roache (Priest). She's stolen a lot of money from her crooked doctor boyfriend Martin (Ian Bliss) and to escape joins the bus tour.

    She has the look of jail about her from the start, a hardness that is believable and more remarkable given her very different role and demeanor in Topless. Grace and Perry are effective even if they have to make do with some terrible scenes, especially one where they decide to throw paint against a wall.

    Some of the set ups just don't work, some are very effective. The elimination of the head villain is memorable but his character is for the most part far too obvious.

    Siam Sunset begins with an atrocious factory scene, a poorly imagined car washing (would you believe) sequence and then a strange death. But I can't stand car washing or room painting scenes featuring Paltrow young love!

    Hopes of another Sweetie or Love Serenade, Death In Brunswick or at least Welcome To Woop Woop sprang to mind; macabre Australian black comedies, but Siam Sunset only gave hints.

    John Polsen (the gay boy in The Sum Of Us) just flirted with that and with about six other genres and left us with a film that was much less than the sum of its parts.
    6Dusteye

    When you know some of the people behind the making of this film, you will know what to expect

    When you know some of the people behind the making of Siam Sunset, you will know what to expect from this film.

    It is co-written by Andrew Knight who is the creator of some of the most successful comedy on Australian TV in recent times including Fast Forward / Full Frontal and SeaChange. There's Al Clarke, who produces Siam, who was also the producer of The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert as well as Nineteen Eighty-Four (now there's an odd paring). Most tellingly though is that it is directed by John Polson - the man behind Tropfest - the fun and popular short film festival in Sydney.

    Looking at those names should tell you that they will make a fun film with comedy slightly on the dark shade, some unglamorous characters who are realistic in some respects yet totally absurd in others, plus . . . er, a big bus in the middle of Australia's outback.

    And that is what you get with Siam Sunset.

    Perry (Linus Roache) an English industrial chemist for a paint company (he makes colours) has his life going just the way he wants it with his wife and work. This is turned completely upside down (or should I say crushed) after a freak accident and begins to feel that he is a curse for everything and everybody around him. From being happy and content, he is now a wreck. He wins a trip to Australia and uses that as a kick start to regaining some of that inner peace that he so dramatically lost. This is expressed in his search for a colour that he calls siam sunset.

    He joins up with a bus tour in Adelaide and soon wishes he hadn't. Well, at least until he meets up with Grace (Danielle Cormack) who is on the run from her drug dealer boyfriend. Grace helps Perry to find his siam sunset. The help partly involves some very dangerous sex (it involves a bed on the verge of collapse, a ceiling fan that is set to fall onto the bed, some dangerously protruding steel coat hooks, dodgy electrics and a taipan snake sleeping underneath the bed just for good measure - the sex scene had to be coordinated by the stunt people).

    John Polson is unashamedly a populist as demonstrated in Tropfest and in the fact that this film won the audience award at Cannes. So with Siam he gives us an amusing and entertaining 90 minutes, but it is by no means going to strike up post-film conversations on it's stunning originality or whether it's OK to have an open marriage.

    This is Polson's feature directorial debut and he has relished the use of the wide screen format. He captures plenty of beauty of the Australian landscape.

    Roache is suitably fish-out-of-water without slipping into English stereotypes. Cormack (who was in Topless Women Talk About Their Lives) as Grace is an enticing addition to the film and the rest of the cast are great fun to see.

    Siam includes all of the ingredients of recent successful Australian films - that's a good and bad thing at the same time, but if you enjoyed movies like Priscilla, Muriel's Wedding and Two Hands then you should enjoy this film - just don't expect it to change your life.
    reinventingm

    Still the funniest Oz movie I've seen. But maybe that's just me...

    It's been over a decade since I first caught this film and I've got to say that in spite of playing with stereotypes, it still has a rare quality; something quintessentially Australian entirely devoid of our renowned cringe factor. Linus Roache, Danielle Cormack and Ian Bliss bring each of their characters to life with great craft and humour. Two Hands is the Sydney experience, Animal Kingdom is the Melbourne experience but Siam Sunset is the completely Oz experience. John Polson and the writers Max Dann and Andrew Knight did a wonderful job in highlighting many of our quirks and mores (for better or for worse) in a thoughtful and funny as hell way as we follow Perry (Roache) - the hapless disaster magnet from England through the shockingly funny death of his wife, his suburban London life crippled by the memories, and on to the tourist trip from hell as he sets off from Adelaide into the red heart of Australia. Grace (Cormack) and Martin (Bliss) are two of the most original cinema characters I've seen in years. In fact, these two characters remind me of many people I've known over the years, so in spite of comments of this movie playing to populism or stereotypes, I can't help but watch it and see the opposite. Alan Borough shines as Stuart - the Stratocaster-mangling singer songwriter and Bill Leach (Roy Billing) who still sticks in my mind not so much as the bus driver from hell, but rather as a ubiquitous bureaucrat of the worst order. Overall a surrealist but highly accurate and well observed ninety minute odyssey that will keep you laughing years after you've experienced it.
    10rnpilot

    Unique Comedy

    The first time my husband and I watched the film, we missed a lot of the humor as we were taking the film too seriously. We had to watch it again to catch all the stuff we missed. We've seen it several times now and love it. We plan to purchace a copy.
    7spmovies

    Make the most of what life throws at you...

    I really enjoyed this movie, as did the two others who attended with me. The humour is quirky and often unexpected. The message of the movie is, in my view, make the best of what life throws at you -- and for the main character, life throws quite a bit!!

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The head producer on this picture was Al Clark who had previously produced another fish-out-of-water outback Australia road movie - the classic Australian film 'The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert' (1994) - about four years earlier.
    • Connections
      Featured in South Australian Film Corporation 40th Anniversary Showreel (2012)
    • Soundtracks
      Raindrops
      Performed by Alan Brough

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    FAQ

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • August 2, 2000 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Australia
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Захід сонця в Сіамі
    • Filming locations
      • Adelaide, South Australia, Australia
    • Production companies
      • Artist Services
      • Channel Four Films
      • New South Wales Film & Television Office
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 31 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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