Film reviews
Men In Black 3
It’s not a sequel that needed to be made, but thanks to the charm of its leads and a tone that harks back to the wit and humour of the original, it’s a pretty enjoyable trip.
Bel Ami
The excellent female support cast saves this patchy effort, which is let down by its leading man and a flat screenplay.
The Dictator
A disappointing, often repulsive and mean-spirited mess of a film with seemingly only one real criterion on its agenda: to shock and offend.
The Woman In Black
Packed with atmosphere, this old-fashioned but deftly told ghost story delivers ample chills and thrills.
The Cup (Film)
Rating: PG
Running Time: 109
Country: Austrakua
Director: Simon Wincer
Cast: Brendan Gleeson , Daniel MacPherson , Stephen Curry , Tom Burlinson
Distributor: Roadshow
Release Date: October 13, 2011
Film Worth: $16.50
FILMINK rates movies out of $20 - the score indicates the amount we believe a ticket to the movie to be worthDriven by Stephen Curry’s brilliant lead performance, this deeply moving story is told in an accessible but powerful manner.

In Australia of late, true life stories have been making something of a comeback, with Red Dog and Mao's Last Dancer warming hearts on a wide scale, and the horrifying Snowtown chilling them in surprisingly large but not quite equal measure. Now comes The Cup, a rousing, tragedy-tinged, high profile true story that walks similar territory to past Aussie classics like Gallipoli and Phar Lap, offering up a tale that many will know, and doing it in a straightforward and highly accessible manner. With the workmanlike but nearly always impressive Simon Wincer (The Lighthorsemen, Phar Lap) at the helm, it's no surprise that The Cup works so well as a strong, unfussy piece of cinematic storytelling.
The film tells the gutsy - and often brutally gutting - story of champion jockey, Damien Oliver (Stephen Curry), who triumphed at The Melbourne Cup on champion steed Media Puzzle mere days after his brother, fellow jockey, Jason Oliver (Daniel MacPherson), died in a tragic on-track pile-up. To make matters even worse, the boys' father, also a jockey, had himself died many years before in a racing accident. Along with a second story detailing Media Puzzle's owner, Irishman Dermot Weld (Brendan Gleeson), not only sensitively dealing with Damien's obvious anxiety over whether or not he will race, but also with the manifold other issues that come with the big race, The Cup provides both a fascinating personal story, and also a compelling behind-closed-doors look at this country's biggest sporting event.
With comic specialist Stephen Curry going wholly dramatic with a brilliant, engaging, highly committed, and supremely physical performance as Damien Oliver, The Cup has the required rock-solid core from which to move powerfully onward, which it does with its strong supporting turns, racetrack verisimilitude, and extraordinarily moving story, which doesn't need - nor thankfully get - any stylistic gussying up. The Cup's success is simple - it's a great story, well told.



