Leanne (Pia Miranda) is training to be a teacher in 1971 Adelaide, but she is more interested in seeing life through the lens of her camera. To make matters worse, she has to suffer the indi... Read allLeanne (Pia Miranda) is training to be a teacher in 1971 Adelaide, but she is more interested in seeing life through the lens of her camera. To make matters worse, she has to suffer the indignities of living at home with her parents (Heather Mitchell and Marshall Napier). Her old... Read allLeanne (Pia Miranda) is training to be a teacher in 1971 Adelaide, but she is more interested in seeing life through the lens of her camera. To make matters worse, she has to suffer the indignities of living at home with her parents (Heather Mitchell and Marshall Napier). Her older sister Bronwyn (Sacha Horler) is finding it difficult to adjust to married life in remo... Read all
- Awards
- 1 win & 4 nominations total
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- (as Christina Page)
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Featured reviews
Even the shining light of Pia Miranda couldn't save this one - it went nowhere fast.
Its not a terrible film at all, just a little pointless.
The film follows the struggle of Leanne (Miranda) as she shrugs off the stability of a career in teaching to explore her other talents, principally photography, and other alternatives to the straight and narrow.
Leanne is inspired to do this partly by a visiting American poet (Stiller) and also by the difficulties faced by her sister Bronwyn (Horler) in adapting to "normal" family life with her new husband. Other friends and family are also thrown into the mix.
The viewer gets the feeling that you had to be there (Adelaide in the early 70's) in order to enjoy the film. Had the film been written and produced better, then it would have had broader appeal.
Pia Miranda, who carries the dubious honour of being considered "second cab off the rank" behind Rose Byrne for the next actress to be picked up by Hollywood, put in a mediocre performance. She was upstaged by Sacha Horler, a little known Australian actress who shows great promise in this film.
The cuts from scene to scene were novel and one of the more interesting parts of the film.
Overshadowed by a bumper crop of great Australian films this year, Travelling Light is highly missable.
Personal favourite actress, Sacha Horler, has a lacklustre role of unhappily married older sister, and the arrival of Ben Stiller tries to contrast US hippy culture against dull Oz suburban conformist values, but the satire is too low key here. The film could have been good, but, like Adelaide in that era it is too slow, flat and predictable.
Leanne is thoroughly uninspired by the idea of becoming a teacher and thinks that she would be a better photographer than a teacher. Bronwyn would much prefer to back teaching than being a housewife. Enter hippy American poet, Lou, to shake things up.
This is a meanderingly slow film with very few shadows and most of the time the cast look bemused trying to do their best with the screenplay (though there is one very funny inspired scene with Ray Sugars (Simon Burke) as a 70s singing/TV personality). An interesting look back to the 70s but not worth a movie ticket. Wait till it's release on dvd/video.
Did you know
- TriviaThe film in 2003 was nominated for 4 AFI (Australian Film Institute) Awards including Best Cinematography for director of photography Tristan Milani, Best Original Music Score for composer Richard Vella and Best Original Screenplay for writer-director Kathryn Millard. In the end, the film won one gong for Sacha Horler for Best Actress in a Supporting Role.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Making 'Travelling Light' (2004)
- SoundtracksCatch the Wind
Written and Performed by Donovan
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 28m(88 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1