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IMDbPro

Noise

  • 2007
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 48m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
2.8K
YOUR RATING
Brendan Cowell in Noise (2007)
Trailer for Noise
Play trailer2:13
1 Video
34 Photos
CrimeDramaMysteryThriller

This is a story about the wrong person in the right place at the wrong time. Two heinous crimes have left a suburban town reeling.This is a story about the wrong person in the right place at the wrong time. Two heinous crimes have left a suburban town reeling.This is a story about the wrong person in the right place at the wrong time. Two heinous crimes have left a suburban town reeling.

  • Director
    • Matthew Saville
  • Writer
    • Matthew Saville
  • Stars
    • Brendan Cowell
    • Maia Thomas
    • Katie Wall
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    2.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Matthew Saville
    • Writer
      • Matthew Saville
    • Stars
      • Brendan Cowell
      • Maia Thomas
      • Katie Wall
    • 40User reviews
    • 15Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 13 wins & 19 nominations total

    Videos1

    Noise (2007)
    Trailer 2:13
    Noise (2007)

    Photos33

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    Top cast43

    Edit
    Brendan Cowell
    Brendan Cowell
    • Constable Graham McGahan
    Maia Thomas
    Maia Thomas
    • Lavinia Smart
    Katie Wall
    Katie Wall
    • Constable Caitlin Robinson
    Maude Davey
    Maude Davey
    • Constable Rhonda Harris
    Fiona Macleod
    Fiona Macleod
    • Detective Melanie Ryan
    Georgia Bolton
    • Policewoman
    Carole Browne
    • Dead Lady
    Kent Clifton-Bligh
    • Dead Transit Cop
    Jess Huon
    • Dead Twentysomething #1
    Aaron McJames
    • Paraplegic
    • (as Aaron McLoughlin)
    Aaron Murphy
    • Dead Teenage Boy
    Grant Scicluna
    • Dead Twentysomething #2
    Greg Williams
    • Constable
    Richard Pyros
    Richard Pyros
    • Policeman
    Kylie Trounson
    • Intern
    Nicholas Bell
    Nicholas Bell
    • Snr. Det. Noel Birchall
    Sandra 'Scarlett' Wilson
    • Fiona Frost
    • (as Sandra Wilson)
    Kane McNay
    • Const. Mick Reichelt
    • Director
      • Matthew Saville
    • Writer
      • Matthew Saville
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews40

    6.62.8K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    sara_tunny

    A fine film.

    I was taken by surprise by how good this film was.

    Everyone's performance fit perfectly within the world of the film. Naturalistic, but totally involving. Brendan Cowell was beautifully sympathetic in the lead role.

    The director (Matthew Saville) should be commended for being able to achieve what he has for his first feature. It's a rare thing to see an Australian film so in control of what it's doing. And so moving by it's finish.

    I look forward to seeing it again.

    9 out of Ten.
    8lost-in-limbo

    Music to the Ears.

    Now this is what I call a surprise, and one of the best Australian films to come out in the last couple years. Matthew Saville's magnificently striking, movingly sombre and realistically crafted crime drama "Noise" is quite a neat little package that really does over deliver. We follow that of a self-doubting, and tinnitus afflicted cop McGahan, as he finds himself manning a police van in a suburban community that has just been overwhelmed by a group of vicious murders. The script (within the character's make-up), plus the technical side of the production (sound effects) demonstrates some creative brushes with the whole tinnitus angle. Brendan Conwell's convincing lead performance is nothing more than sensational, in what is a vulnerable turn of coming to terms with the responsibility of his duties and the growing fear of his uncertain health. Maia Thomas' traumatised performance is just as hypnotically good. Saville's lean material is high on mood, blunt and darkly engaging on the gradual build-up of the inner-workings of his characters and environment. The location photography is masterfully shot, and the lighting composition also helps provoke an arresting and brooding atmosphere that shrouds the air. The direction of Saville is casually handled with a prominent rich style, and Bryony Marks' alienating music score never overstays its welcome. Meaningfully top-notch and powerful entertainment.
    6fanita00

    Painstakingly slow

    I like independent movies. I like to see the work of many talented people resulting in a work of art. This piece is one of those. The acting, sound, post, cinematography, story, the entire piece was really good, it is totally worth watching. However, this piece of art tried too hard to suck the audience into its psyche by elongating the scenes to the point of exhaustion. I wonder how many "beats" were in the script. I actually got so bored with the pace of the movie that I decided to get out the ironing board to do something productive with my time while the movie slowly unfolded. So ladies and gents, make sure you bring something to keep you entertained during the unnecessarily long scenes. Chop 15 minutes off the top and you got yourselves a real winner. Still a good little indie.
    rooprect

    Classic cinema with an edge

    This film reminds me of classic early Hitchcock films like "Blackmail", "Strangers on a Train" or "Secret Agent". These are films that don't feature a lot of action but instead focus on mood, message, dialogue and the audience's imagination.

    I'll omit the customary rant about today's Hollywood action flicks with car chases, explosions, cgi & contrived romances with busty supermodels because you don't need to hear it. Suffice it to say that this film is the opposite of that stuff. Here, in Hitchcockian form, we get a quiet, slow-moving freight train of a film. It sparks your imagination as you work to piece together not just the story but the meaning & symbolism behind everything.

    The title of the film refers to an ear condition suffered by the main character. He is plagued by a high pitched whining in his head which could be indicative of a terminal condition or possibly nothing. Similarly, the film focuses around fear and how it plays with our minds... possibly justified or possibly paranoia, but powerful regardless.

    The story revolves around a crime, witness protection and an underdog police officer's attempts to deal with it in addition to his own failing life. There is a pervasive feeling of loneliness and disconnection that runs throughout the film, which for some reason reminds me of the Clint Eastwood classic "In the Line of Fire" (about a failed secret service agent trying to wrap his head around an assassination plot.

    It's slow paced but powerful. I'd say if you're a fan of Wim Wenders ("Wings of Desire", "Paris Texas", "Million Dollar Hotel") or Takeshi Kitano ("A Scene at the Sea", "Fireworks") or Rebecca Miller ("Angela") you'll probably like this film. It doesn't have a lot of flashy pyrotechnics to hold the attention of the average Hollywood-action-flick-junkie, but if you're looking for a powerful, poetic experience, look no further.
    10romper-2

    A very well crafted and subtle film

    I loved this film. It's a subtle, layered and measured work with good performances and a wonderful use of music and sound design. The story is well paced and again I see it in musical terms with the crescendos and diminuendos carefully crafted and motifs re-occurring throughout. I also found it a visual pleasure - well lit and photographed.

    For a lot of the time, the soundscape echoes the tinnitus of the lead character. Constable McGann is a man isolated in several senses and the film hovers for the most part, like he does, on the periphery of a horrendous and senseless crime. This isn't really a police procedural, but an exploration of the lives affected by the event - the locals sitting just outside the event horizon and in danger of getting sucked into the vortex.

    There's knowledge hidden from us, the audience, and also events and motivations that are hidden from the protagonists - even those directly affected by them and involving them. To that extent, this movie reminds me a lot of Memento.Meaning unfolds and understanding grows as the film progresses, but at the end, you are deliberately left with pieces missing from the jigsaw puzzle. It seems to me that you are meant to be left with a sense of the fragility of society; a sense that there will always be gaps in the way we understand our relationships to others and in the way our lives play out.

    I love the way that the movie ends with austere credits rolling over a couple of minutes of silence, before sound in the form of an orchestra creeps back into our perception, instrument by instrument. We share the hero's aural affliction throughout the movie and the silence and re-introduction of sound offers a sense of change and resolution - and maybe hope.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The driver of the ute asks the copper, "You're not gonna canary the ute, are ya?". A 'canary' is a yellow sticker issued and attached to the windscreen by the police on an unroadworthy vehicle. It indicates a time limit in which the vehicle must be repaired and made roadworthy.
    • Goofs
      The train carriage in which the massacre occurs is halfway down the train. One of the victims is a man in an electric wheelchair. Because there is a gap between train and platform on Melbourne's train system people in electric wheelchairs must board the train in the front carriage, where the driver can assist by placing a ramp between the train and platform.
    • Quotes

      Constable Graham McGahan: I got this theory about that. You know, what I read was, heaven or hell, is whatever you're thinking that second between your body dying and your brain dying. Your regrets, who you loved, who loved you. What you remember of your life, that's the eternity everyone's talking about. So, if you are a fuckwit, then... when you die, in that ten seconds between your brain and your body dying, your brain remembers all the time you were a fuckwit - over and over again... until it feels like this eternity. But if you weren't an idiot all your life, then your brain would remember that. Your brain would remember all the occasions when you managed not to be an embarassment - and that would be heaven.

    • Connections
      Featured in South Australian Film Corporation 40th Anniversary Showreel (2012)

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Noise?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 3, 2007 (Australia)
    • Country of origin
      • Australia
    • Official sites
      • Arclight Films
      • Film Movement
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • İçimdeki gürültü
    • Filming locations
      • Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
    • Production company
      • Retro Active Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • A$4,300,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $800,755
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 48m(108 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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