Ned Kelly (2004) Movie Review
Ned Kelly (2004) Review

"Ned Kelly (2004)" Overview

Rating: R
2004
Cast and Crew
Director : Gregor JordanProducer : Nelson Woss,Tim Bevan,Robert Drewe
Screenwiter : John M. McDonagh
Starring : Heath Ledger,Orlando Bloom,Naomi Watts,Geoffrey Rush,Joel Edgerton
Sometimes all you want is a good Western, and when you see something like Ned
Kelly, which starts off as predictable but enjoyable nonsense, go so thoroughly
off the rails, you have to wonder: Is it still even possible to make a good
outlaw-on-the-run film anymore?
The historical Ned Kelly is like the Jesse James of Australia, mixed with a
little John Dillinger, Robin Hood, and (if this movie has anything to say about
it) Jesus Christ. Gregor Jordan’s film (made previously in 1970 with Mick
Jagger in the lead) starts off north of Melbourne, circa 1871, with the
hardscrabble Irish Kelly family. The man of the house after his father died
years before, Ned (Heath Ledger) gets sent to jail after a cop unjustly accuses
him of stealing a horse and provokes him into a fight. Freed after three years,
Ned tries to go the straight and narrow, doing day labor and even bare-knuckle
boxing for money. But wouldn’t you know it: The bloody coppers have it in for
poor Neddy.
One night, when Ned’s off seducing the wife (Naomi Watts, Ledger’s real-life
on-again, off-again girlfriend) of a wealthy landowner he’s working for, a
policeman comes by the Kelly household, looking for a date with Ned’s sister,
whom he’s been harassing down at the pub. After the Kelly boys rough him up,
the cop claims Ned shot him, at which point the whole constabulary comes and
arrests the mother. Now, don’t they know you can’t throw a good Irish boy’s ma
behind bars? As the screenplay actually has Ned say, “I won’t take this
injustice!” Ned and a couple of his buddies, including Joe Byrne (Orlando
Bloom, the only actor who seems to be enjoying himself here), head out to the
bush, only to get chased by the coppers and before you know it, there’s been a
wee shootout and three of the cops end up dead. Soon, Ned’s got himself an
outlaw gang that’s robbing banks, burning mortgages, and giving money to the
poor. They’ve also got a small army on their trail, led by Geoffrey Rush, who
seems to be reprising his Inspector Javert from Les Miserables.
Now, those deaths weren’t Ned’s fault, but then, nothing in this film is. From
the first supposed horse theft (Ned just found the horse), to the first fight
with a cop (he started it!) to the strange police vendetta against Ned (they
started it!), it’s as though the entire Australian law enforcement
establishment woke up each and every morning with a single thought in their
heads: Get Ned Kelly. John McDonagh’s script of Robert Drewe’s novel Our
Sunshine makes an attempt to draw a parallel between Ned’s problems and the
general oppression of poor Irish. That’s all well and good, but when it asks
the viewer to believe a series of such ludicrous developments – which leave out
unpleasant facts, like the real Ned Kelly being in and out of jail on assault
and theft charges since he was 14 – it’s hard to build up much sympathy.
None of this means that Ned Kelly still couldn’t have been salvaged. The story
is boilerplate but rousing, and it’s a handsome enough production, with
cinematographer Oliver Stapleton painting lyrical scenes of the raw Australian
countryside and its wildlife. But director Jordan (Buffalo Soldiers) doesn’t
seem to have a fundamental grasp of the mechanics of the Western. Once the
chase is on, the film somehow slows down, and its off-putting rhythms make the
grating dialogue all the more exasperating.
With Rush, Watts, and Ledger, this is sort of an Aussie all-star production,
which makes it all the stranger something better couldn’t have been dredged up.
One wonders what Peter Weir and Russell Crowe could have done with the same
material. Or Paul Hogan, for that matter.
Ned heads out.
Reviewer: Chris Barsanti





