Jenny Agutter,
Luc Roeg,
David Gulpilil,
John Meillon,
John Illingsworth
... see more
The contrast between modern, urban civilization and life in the natural world lies at the heart of Nicolas Roeg's visually dazzling drama Walkabout. In broad outline, the plot might resemble a standar... read more
DVD Release Date: April 21, 1998
Stats: 530 reviews
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Flixster Reviews (530)
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October 27, 2011fb1664868775A beautifully photographed film with the backdrop of the Australian outback.
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February 10, 2011
Director Nicolas Roeg's (`Don't Look Now') cinematographic skills and admiration pay especial tribute to Walkabout's powerful combination of Australia's awesome scenic diversity and the sensual Jenny Agutter, and the whole effect is embellished by John Barry's sublimely magical s... read more
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July 22, 2010fb619846742A hypnotizing, astoundingly shot story concerning a brother and sister who depend on an aborigine to survive in the outback of Australia after their father commits suicide after dragging them out in the desert in a car running on empty. Roeg's handling of relationships in this mo... read more
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July 13, 2010
A "walkabout" is rite of passage ritual for 16-year old Australian Aboriginal boys. As part of their entrance into manhood, they wander into the Outback and try to survive for months at a time. In this film, that concept is expanded to include two siblings -- a teenage girl and a... read more
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November 29, 2009
mesmerizing, magnificent looking and deeply saddening if a bit 70's artsy at times. that said, i'm afraid this beautiful film would be difficult to make today due to nudity/sexual themes with underage actors, which is a shame
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October 28, 2008
An urban, slightly sleazy father takes his two public school children into the outback for a picnic. He's in a suit, and has brought some paperwork. His kids are in their stiff school uniforms. Clothes, demeanor, action and the Volkswagon Beetle all jar with the hostile desert lo... read more
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March 9, 2007
Thoughtful coming of age drama set in the Australian outback, featuring an unusually sensitive take on culture clash. Intelligently done, but rather lacking in drama.
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March 25, 2011fb1350754613Slow at times and the older boy's behavior becomes weird and unexplainable at the end, but it's a good survival tale and shows how even in bad times, good things can come out of them. Although, the young brother is not supposed to understand the dire situation that him and his ol... read more
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November 6, 2010
Exceptionally intriguing, keeping you engaged and interested. This film serves a great purpose of not being an overly cliche of the reality of diversity between humans (though it does display a somewhat resonating factor), but rather the harsh reality of life happening in a blink... read more
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April 21, 2008
I knew I had come across this film before. I remember bits of it from watching it as a child, and being confused (and slightly disturbed) by the father shooting himself and setting himself and the car on fire. Watching it again now I can understand and appreciate the film for wha... read more
Critic Reviews
Is it a parable about noble savages and the crushed spirits of city dwellers? That's what the film's surface seems to suggest, but I think it's also about something deeper and more elusive: The myster... Full Review
Roeg intercuts images of modern life with the lushness of nature -- offering a stunning fable about the importance of respecting the earth. Full Review
[VIDEO] "Walkabout" is a poetic film that incorporates a collective subconscious of humanist values. Full Review
A unique survival film, that has become a cult favorite. Full Review
Peeling colonialism, awakening and the Dawn of Man are fiercely indicated in Roeg's wondrous fever Full Review
The overt symbolism hampers a subject and approach that could have led to a sublime result. Full Review
Walkabout's obvious concern is the relationship between two parties, separated by centuries of diverting societal behaviors, and thus, differentiated perceptions of sexual roles and etiquette. But wha... Full Review
Roeg creates in Walkabout a world of his own, a microcosmos that is at once beautiful, primitive, wild, familiar yet unfamiliar, thoughtful, and thought provoking. Full Review
Roeg would go on to better films, but the basics of his approach are found in this landmark work of haunting beauty and ugliness. Full Review
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