Tanna

2015

Action / Adventure / Drama / Romance

15
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 92% · 39 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 76% · 500 ratings
IMDb Rating 6.9/10 10 4714 4.7K

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Plot summary

In a traditional tribal society in the South Pacific, a young girl, Wawa, falls in love with her chief’s grandson, Dain. When an inter-tribal war escalates, Wawa is unknowingly betrothed as part of a peace deal. The young lovers run away, refusing her arranged fate. They must choose between their hearts and the future of the tribe, while the villagers must wrestle with preserving their traditional culture and adapting it to the increasing outside demands for individual freedom.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
September 12, 2019 at 04:53 AM

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720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
928.2 MB
1280*714
English 2.0
NR
24 fps
1 hr 44 min
Seeds 1
1.63 GB
1920*1072
English 2.0
NR
24 fps
1 hr 44 min
Seeds 2

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by karthik-ravichandran7 7 / 10

A rare film.

Tanna is a beautiful and tragic love story of two star crossed lovers who create a conflict between the heritage and the changing circumstance in a conventional community. This film is completely shot in gorgeous locations of Vanuatu an island in the South Pacific Ocean, all the actors in the film belong to the native tribe who are completely away from the modern world. This makes the film very authentic. This kind of films are very rare. The story told here is true, re-enacted decades after the fact. The plot is fairly familiar. It is best not to watch this film for the plot, instead for the visual imagery and to witness a culture that we have not encountered before. This film portrays modernization as a kind of loss of innocence. The cinematography and the score are hauntingly beautiful. This is a remarkable cinematic undertaking in what it has achieved. This film is a need for humanity.

Reviewed by MOscarbradley 6 / 10

A tale as old as time

In some respects this film reminded me of Murnau's "Tabu". It hails from Australia, (and is the Australian entry for this year's Best Foreign Film Oscar), but is actually set on the remote Pacific island of Tanna among the Yakel tribe and tells of the forbidden love between Wawa and Dain, the son of the chief. Gorgeously shot in the rain forests of Tanna, which is part of Vanuatu, and on an active volcano, it has the feel of a documentary, (the cast are non-professionals), but is constructed like a thriller with a touch of 'Romeo and Juliet' thrown in. It was co-directed by Martin Butler, (it marks his feature debut), and its cinematographer Bentley Dean and there is a harshness at play that belies the beauty of the locations though there is also a degree of humour too. The problem with the picture is that the material is old-hat, however exotic the setting. As a certain song says, this is a tale as old as time but it's redeemed, in this instance, by the treatment.

Reviewed by eddie_baggins 5 / 10

A unique and beautiful film let-down by a generic plot line

The fact that the little known Australian backed film Tanna was nominated this year at the Academy Awards in the Best Foreign Language category is quite the feat.

A film that barely saw recognition when it was released in Australian cinemas early last year, Tanna all of a sudden found itself competing on the world's biggest cinematic stage and it's lovely to see such a low key Australian effort make it to the Dolby Theatre, even if Martin Butler and Bentley Dean's film isn't the sum of its parts.

Before delving into Tanna the film, it's worth noting that the very fact that this movie exists and the background behind it makes it a film worth talking about, if not a film you'll be recommending to many people come the closing credits.

An Australian/Vanuatu co-production that's filmed entirely in one of the local islands native dialects and stars villagers of the country who are not only non-professional's, but also actors who'd never seen a camera let alone a motion picture, directors Martin Butler and Bentley Dean went too great lengths to bring this true story to life.

Like a real life stripped backed Romeo and Juliet, Tanna tells the story of lovebirds Dain and Wawa as they fight to be together against the rules of their tribe and people and are outcast, left to traverse the naturally beautiful landscape of their surrounds.

It's within this that Butler and Dean deliver some truly stunning cinematography and bring about naturalistic performances from their learning on the job cast, these elements combine and work together wonderfully with acclaimed composer Antony Partos's score and Gladiator songstress Lisa Gerrard's vocals and it gives Tanna a much needed boost when its less successful combinations come to the forefront.

For such a unique motion picture it's a real shame Tanna's central story feels so generic and unengaging, we never feel a connection to Dain and Wawa, partly due to skin deep performances but largely due to the delivery of stilted dialogue and a fact that the actual story itself isn't that original.

You can't help but escape the feeling that such a one-off piece of work would've benefited from taking more risks with its narrative and while it can't be an easy task for foreign filmmakers to work in the conditions that Tanna set itself up for, there's never an excuse for a film of this ilk to delve into boredom inducing lulls or such forceful script work, no matter the language.

Final Say –

Full credit to the Australian film industry for getting behind such a grand vision and what a fantastic cue for such a low-key Australian event to find itself a whole new audience on the biggest stage in Hollywood but while Tanna is a pretty and well intentioned tale of forbidden romance in a totally majestical setting, there's nothing that special about the story it tells or how it tells it, making Tanna a disappointing but a never less than curious affair.

2 1/2 angry volcano's out of 5

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