Sunday, February 15, 2009

Three Blind Mice

by Jay Kerr on February 15, 2009 · 2 comments

in Film Festivals

Three Blind Mice

Three Blind Mice (Director: Matthew Newton): Three naval officers go on a 24-hour shore-leave in Sydney. Before they ship out for Iraq they plan to have a night on the town. There’s an uneasy ten­sion in each of the officers that grows as the night wears on and the film peels back the layers of their char­ac­ters. By the end of the night we have a much dif­ferent under­standing of these men and their friendship.

In addi­tion to writing and dir­ecting, Matthew Newton plays Harry, one of the three sailors. He’s a chatty, charming ver­sion of Vince Vaughn and a lot of fun to watch. The writing is snappy and all of the per­form­ances are quite believable.

The film is low-budget and reminded me a lot of Swingers. Forget the fancy crane shots, spe­cial effects and sweeping score, this film is all dia­logue. So if you enjoy films such as Smoke that rely heavily on writing then you’ll appre­ciate what Three Blind Mice has to offer from Down Under.

Three Blind Mice screened at TIFF’08 but I was unable to see it then. At the time of this review it still hasn’t found a dis­trib­utor so I feel lucky to have seen it at OzFlix. If you’re in Scotland you can screen Three Blind Mice on February 16 at the Glasgow Film Festival.

6/10(6/10)

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