Metro

Arid Visions REFLECTIONS IN THE DUST, GENDERED VIOLENCE AND EXPERIMENTAL CINEMA

It’s not a big surprise that a film like Reflections in the Dust (Luke Sullivan, 2018) might court controversy. In an era of monolithic mega-blockbusters, a micro-budget slice of arthouse Australiana demands some kind of hook to pierce the bubble of cinematic complacency. So why not promise scandal? Suggest a whiff of something illicit, something beyond the realms of polite society?

Anyway, it worked on me. When an email from distributor The Backlot Films arrived in my inbox offering something ‘too extreme’1 for audiences, how could an aficionado of fringe cinema deny the call? The full quote – which has been reproduced in various synopses of the film online – is as follows:

The Australian government deemed the film was too extreme for audiences and strongly suggested it not be completed during production, however director Luke Sullivan pushed on with the film, asserting that such an extreme story needs to be told in an era where ‘we are losing grandmothers, mothers, sisters and friends to senseless acts of violence perpetrated by men’.2

I couldn’t deny the allure. I quickly requested a screener, won over by the promise of not just extreme cinema, but something purposeful, political. Confronting. And, while I can’t speak to the veracity of the synopsis’s assertion of behind-the-scenes controversy – the film remains proudly in place on the Screen Australia website, a fact that seems to controvert such claims, but I’ll avoid dabbling in backyard investigative journalism – there’s

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Metro

Metro12 min read
Artificial Rain
The follow-up to his acclaimed debut Ilo Ilo, Singaporean filmmaker Anthony Chen’s second feature reflects many of the same thematic concerns about family relationships, domestic responsibility, and the gulf between his homeland’s self-representation
Metro8 min read
The View From The Shore
Accounts of James Cook’s ‘discovery’ of Australia have long been told solely from the viewpoint of European colonisers, an imbalance that Steven McGregor’s documentary seeks to rectify. Presented by spoken-word poet Steven Oliver and structured aroun
Metro1 min readInternet & Web
More About ATOM’s Study Guides
ATOM study guides can be downloaded from The Education Shop for free or for $4.95 each, depending on how long we have been hosting the file. They can be emailed to students or uploaded to the school’s intranet or learning management system. https://t

Related Books & Audiobooks