The New Boy

The New Boy (2023)

06/07/2023

#Drama

Overview

In 1940s Australia, a nameless nine-year-old Aboriginal orphan arrives in the dead of night at a remote monastery overseen by a renegade nun, where his presence disturbs its delicately balanced world.

Status: Released

Rating: 56%

Original language: EN

Budget: $0

Revenue: $780,646

Official website:
https://beacons.page/thenewboy

Details

Production Companies

Dirty Films

Dirty Films

Scarlett Pictures

Scarlett Pictures

Fremantle Australia

Fremantle Australia

Social Network

IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt18180926

Wikipedia: https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q117745345

Facebook: No data

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Cast

Reviews (1)

Review by: CinemaSerf

Written by: CinemaSerf on 2024-03-27T08:14:45.000Z

Set against a backdrop of a strongly colonial and white Australia, we are rather violently introduced to a young, blonde, Aboriginal lad (Aswan Reid) who is conked out by a boomerang and awakens to find himself in the care of "Sister Eileen" (Cate Blanchett) and "Sister Mum" (Deborah Mailman) at a remote orphanage. She is pretty devout and he is very much in tune with nature - both people of faith, but not the same kind. The arrival of a large wooden crucifix to top their altar seems to focus both of them on what now becomes a rather dry and simplistic tale of spirituality. Reid does come across well. There is a spontaneity and naturalness to his performance, but Blanchett over-eggs just about all of the rest of it. She does this type of role well - shorn hair, manic eyes, slightly eccentric characterisation - but here there's just not enough story for her (or us) to get the teeth into. I got the sense that there was something almost "Oliver Twist" about the lad. Blonde? Sent away? Did he have a secret identity? That's not the story, though - and when he suffers his own rather personal misfortune at the end, I felt a rather overwhelming dislike of "Eileen" and her superstition-ridden church. Too be fair, this isn't a film that doesn't provoke a response - but with sparse dialogue and little character development, it's not really much more than a beautifully photographed vehicle for Blanchett to indulge herself and for Reid to be a boy facing a confusing future.

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