Wednesday, December 16, 2020

True History of the Kelly Gang

True History of the Kelly Gang takes liberties with the history of Australian outlaw and folk hero Ned Kelly (George MacKay) for "entertainment" purposes. I put "entertainment" in quotes because True History of the Kelly Gang is anything but entertaining. The film is a slog through Kelly's cheerless childhood to learning the outlaw ways and eventually running his own gang (while skirting issues of his sexuality and motivations at every turn). I'm not saying you couldn't find a way to make an entertaining movie about a crossdressing cowboy, but this certainly isn't it.

Adapted from the novel of the same name, the script adapted by Shaun Grant spends quite a bit of time on Kelly's relationship to his parents (Essie Davis and Ben Corbett) and offering an explanation for where his later violence was born, but it doesn't have much to say about Kelly as either an outlaw or a man. The tone shifts wildly from dark and brooding to at times nearly whimsical leading to an uneven experience that leaves me disinterested in learning anything more about Ned Kelly (or ever seeing this film again).

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