Somersault Movie Review
Somersault Review
"Somersault" Overview

Rating: NR
2004
Cast and Crew
Director : Cate ShortlandProducer : Anthony Anderson,Jan Chapman
Screenwiter : Cate Shortland
Starring : Abbie Cornish,Sam Worthington,Lynette Curran,Hollie Andrew,Olivia,Pigeot
Despite its title, Cate Shortland’s Somersault has no impressive feats of
gymnastic ability in its 105 minutes. Instead, we are treated to another story
of a young woman discovering both love and sexuality, while also learning the
crucial differences between them. My Summer of Love, an impassioned, but wholly
contrived film that debuted earlier this year, looked at these events in the
face of a young lesbian (bisexual?) relationship. Shortland goes for the
straight and narrow.
Heidi (Abbie Cornish) is a naïve teen who lives with her mom and her boyfriend.
Before your mind starts flopping around in the gutter, no, the boyfriend does
not molest her and he is not an abusive drunk. One morning, after her mom
leaves, Heidi comes onto the boyfriend and they begin to kiss, right as Heidi’s
mom, Nicole (Olivia Pigeot) comes back in to catch them. Quickly, Heidi runs
off to the town of Jindabyne, where she shacks up with a local yuppie for a
place to stay. Second night, she meets the mysterious and handsome Joe (Sam
Worthington), who takes her back to a hotel where they have at it, like we all
know they will. Heidi makes friends with the hotel manager Irene (Lynette
Curran) and takes a job at the local gas station with Bianca (Hollie Andrew), a
strange, presumptuous woman around Heidi’s age. The film mainly consists of
Heidi trying to keep these relationships in check and trying to make a life out
of the nothing that she has.
We have a character, Heidi, and she is played with gravity and nuance by
newcomer Abbie Cornish (think young Nicole Kidman). Also, there are
complications to that character that are given real power through the cast that
outlines Heidi’s adventure. The film has heart and soul but it’s desperately
lacking a body, which, for once, is a negative quality. Shortland’s script is
shortsighted and never digs enough into the heart of the matter that makes
Heidi the fascinating incarnation she is. Robert Humphreys’ camerawork brings a
magnetic, haunting vibrancy to Heidi’s walks alone and Shortland, as a
director, gives a crisp feeling to the small, strange happenings that the film
brings up, but never really deals with (Joe’s homosexuality, Bianca’s younger
brother, Irene’s son). Sadly, these images and ideas are nothing we can’t find
in meatier, braver films (recently: Ira Sachs’ astonishing Forty Shades of
Blue, the aforementioned My Summer of Love).
Somersault swept the Australian Film Institute Awards last year, which is why
it got a release in the states. More than likely, it will be released in LA and
NYC to a small, interested crowd who either want to look smart or who have
friends who worked on the film in Australia. It will be forgotten, and it’s
hard to make a case for its remembrance. This, however, should not be taken as
a sign of a truly bad movie going on under the celluloid. In fact, most people
working on the film do their jobs to commendable effect. However, I say this
like I would say “That wasn’t a bad episode of My So-Called Life”. We enjoy and
like the film but we are not asked to hang onto it or its ideas. Instead, there
are just images of pretty shots and a good-looking Australian girl that we can’
t really place with a time or setting. Like Patrick Bateman said in American
Psycho, there is an idea of a movie here, but no real movie.
DVD extras include making-of featurettes and deleted scenes.
Reviewer: Chris Cabin





