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Sweetie

New Zealand

1989

99 Min
Color
English
  • Currently 3.7/5 Stars.
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DIR Jane Campion

PROD John Maynard

SCR Gerard Lee, Jane Campion

DP Sally Bongers

CAST Genevieve Lemon, Karen Colston, Tom Lycos, Jon Darling, Dorothy Barry, Michael Lake, Andre Pataczek

ED Veronika Haussler

MUSIC Martin Armiger

Toronto (Dialogues: Talking with Pictures)

Synopsis

Though she went on to create a string of brilliant films, Jane Campion will always be remembered for her stunning debut feature, Sweetie, which focuses on the hazardous relationship between the buttoned-down, superstitious Kay and her rampaging, devil-may-care sister, "Sweetie"—and by extension, their entire family’s profoundly rotten roots. A feast of colorful photography and captivating, idiosyncratic characters, Sweetie heralded the emergence of this gifted director as well as the breakthrough of Australian cinema, which would take international film by storm in the nineties. —The Criterion Collection

Director

Jane_campion

Jane Campion

Rising to prominence in the 1990s, New Zealand director Jane Campion is known as one of the contemporary cinema’s most distinctive personalities. Her feature films, though varied in quality, have been united by their compelling depictions of the lives of women who are in some way outside of society’s mainstream. Campion’s films explore what makes these women different, and the repercussions of their refusal, or inability, to conform. Thanks to this subject matter, Campion has often been labeled a feminist director, a label that, while not inaccurate, fails to fully capture the dilemmas of her characters and the depth of her work. Born in Waikenae, New Zealand, on April 30, 1954, Campion was the product of a theatrical family. Her mother, Edith Campion is an actress and writer, while her father, Richard, is a theater and opera director. Educated at Wellington’s Victoria University, where she earned a B.A. in structural arts, Campion went on to study fine arts at London’s Chelsea School… read more

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Brandon D.

26Jan10

You've gotta love Gordon (the father).  
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N_Coffield86

22Dec09

I found the characters annoying and the plot stupid. The only good thing about this film is campions brilliant cameria work.   
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Mugino

11Oct09

Campion is very good at capturing the beauty within the ugly, awkward, messiness of people's lives. "Sweetie" is lovely to look at and Campion's perspectives on the everyday are unique. The acting is earthy and completely believable. Yet there is something tiresome about the story, which has nothing new to say about family dysfunctions.   
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Sun

19Sep09

Here's a realm full of loonies, enthralled and effected by the looniest of them all.  

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Untitled

By MAO on February 13, 2009

@ Stephen. The acting is not the best? C’mon. The performances are a part of why it’s so great.

SWEETIE, from the first scene, plays ecstatically like a droll pop art exercise in cahoots with…  read review

Untitled

By dijana on February 12, 2009

..a more daring little miss sunshine (of course, it’s foreign!)

cinematography is very flirty, colorful, and playful. loved it.

i agree with stephen, sweetie and kay’s relationship was…  read review

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DVD

Buy the DVD from The Criterion Collection.