Hearts and Bones

2019

Action / Drama

6
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 81% · 27 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 73%
IMDb Rating 6.6/10 10 778 778

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Plot summary

A shell-shocked photojournalist, haunted by what he has witnessed on assignment in Africa, returns home on the eve of becoming a father. When one of his photographs threatens to destroy a Sudanese refugee's new life, the two men are reunited by nightmare events from the past.

Director

Top cast

Hugo Weaving as Dan Fisher
Alan Dukes as Graham Fisher
Ava Caryofyllis as Iraqi Minefield Girl
Hayley McElhinney as Josie Avril
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
1011.77 MB
1280*534
English 2.0
NR
24 fps
1 hr 50 min
Seeds 1
2.03 GB
1920*800
English 5.1
NR
24 fps
1 hr 50 min
Seeds 1

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by emcebe 8 / 10

Wonderful movie

Great performances from all the cast, particularly the leads , and a wonderful story combining brilliant sub stories within which heightened the drama and gave insight into the Dreadful impacts on persons caught in a war zone , anywhere in the world , from the participators to the observers, to the partners of both - in this case , the observer, a photo journalist ( Weaving) freshly returned from Iraq, an encounter with a Sudanese refugee ( Andrew Luri in his first ever role ) , the participant - which evolves into a friendship and the partners of each of these men and their own stories. The interaction with a group of survivors of other war zones in a peaceful setting, all with their own stories , was wonderful, and a type of healing for them all. We could only guess at each of their stories and the hardships they had suffered before they ever arrived in Sydney, but the pain behind the smiles was palpable, and telling in itself. . The Sudanese story peeled off layer by layer - and I do not want to include spoilers. Suffice to say the film tore at the heartstrings in more ways than one , but deftly done, thought provoking and a truly great story. See it if you can - so glad we paid the funds to see this movie that may never have a cinema release due to the Covid crises . Weaving excellent as always as were all the cast .
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Reviewed by ferguson-6 7 / 10

fine Aussie filmmaking

Greetings again from the darkness. How would you feel if someone photographed the worst moment of your life, and then exhibited it for the world to see? That question is at the heart of this drama, the first narrative feature from writer-director Ben Lawrence. His co-writer is Beatrix Christian, who also wrote the screenplay for JINDABYNE, an excellent 2006 film directed by Ben's father, Ray Lawrence.

Daniel Fisher (Hugo Weaving, "The Matrix" and "The Lord of the Rings" franchises) is a renowned war photographer, and we first see him on assignment in 2018 Iraq. When he returns home to the Western Sydney suburbs, his longtime partner Josie (Hayley McElhinney, THE BABADOOK 2014) surprises him with news that she's pregnant. They still struggle with the pain of losing their previous daughter, Eve. On top of that, Fisher's work is scheduled to be the centerpiece of a high profile exhibit coming soon. The stress manifests itself physically through shaking hands and fainting spells.

Fisher is a bit of a mess when he's tracked down by Sebastian Ahmed (the screen debut of Andrew Luri), who requests that Fisher not include photographs of the massacre which occurred in his south Sudan village 15 years prior. Sebastian says the memories are too painful, as he lost his family during that time. He's now a refugee building a new life for his pregnant wife Anishka (Bolude Watson) and their young child. Sebastian works as a taxi driver and in a commercial laundry, and when he pushes Anishka to let him buy a house for their family, she says matter-of-factly, "We work. That is our life. It's all we do." It's a frustrating dose of reality for Sebastian who sees a house as confirmation that they belong.

There is so much going on in what, on the surface, appears to be a quiet little film where two men form an unlikely friendship. PTSD is a factor for both men, as war has left its mark, as it so often does. Sebastian has kept his past life a secret from his wife, but that's only part of the story when it comes to why he doesn't want the photographs exhibited. Fisher is described as "documenting human pain and misery", while his work is labeled "misery porn". Is that fair? We get both sides of the gray area associated with that question noted in my first paragraph above.

Filmmaker Lawrence benefits from four terrific performances, and though the ending is a bit shaky, the stress and emotional turmoil that those four characters endure is extremely well handled. "Who are you?" is a question Anishka asks her husband, and by the end it can be asked of all four characters. There is little wonder why this has been so warmly received on the film festival circuit ... it's thought-provoking and emotional. In theaters and On Demand November 20, 2020

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