Saturday, 14 February 2026

STREAMING ON APPLE TV+ & AMAZON PRIME VIDEO - Mike Retter recommends THE LAST GRIND (Pete Williams, Australia, 2023)

 

Jude Turner starring in Emotion Is Dead/The Last Grind (2023) 

Over the last couple of years, several people have brought up Emotion Is Dead (2023) and suggested I watch it. It's a loose thriller plot wrapped around a conceptually more interesting look at de-industrialised Elizabeth and closure of the Holden automobile plant. The film opens with old television sets playing nostalgic Holden commercials and rosy educational films about Elizabeth before the city was gutted of industry. It then centers on a young man in the present played by Jude Turner working as a gardener who starts thieving from wealthy clients. 


On the one hand, we have a valiant attempt to make an independent film that explores serious existential issues for many thousands of people. Social catastrophe comes in the wake of deindustrialisation and the film is quite aggressive in its position and sincere in its tribute to an ocean of people affected.  


But on the other hand, the film is filled with a great degree of caricature where it could have used more naturalism. The protagonist's mother is uncannily written like that of Vincent Gallo's mother in the black comedy Buffalo '66 (1998). She is dressed in Holden-branded clothing and living past glories of Peter Brock car races like Vincent Gallo's Buffalo Bill's obsessed VHS watching mother played by Anjelica Huston. The problem is, Emotion Is Dead plays it straight and it comes off as immature cliche. 


Left: Gabby Llewelyn as "Shazza" in Emotion Is Dead/The Last Grind (2023).
Right: Anjelica Huston in Buffalo '66 (1998).


Sometimes artists use being born in a town as license of authenticity in regards to what they depict. But very little of Elizabeth's character, a city that has lots of it, is actually captured or depicted. Instead we get a cartoonish class consciousness, where an upper-crust university friend puts the protagonist through some demeaning hazing rituals. It's just ridiculous. Even the train journey is a lost opportunity to make an impression of the landscape or express the often atmospheric train cabin interiors. Elizabeth has many interesting vistas that catch the light and distinctive red soil that tip-toes to the desert. Much more attention to detail is spent capturing the leafy green Eastern suburbs where the lead actor does gardening work and arguably the film's sensibility lies.    

 

Buffalo New York, the hometown that director Vincent Gallo sometimes claims to hate, is shown in more focus, familiarity and reverence than anything about the Northern Suburbs in Emotion. Look at all the scuffed surfaces of Recckio's Bowling Center in South Buffalo. Gallo buys Christina Ricci a heart shaped cookie, a regional Buffalo specialty from Dickie's Donuts. The local Denny's haunt evokes transience and Americana. People online mourn the loss of CaffĂ© Lococo, which became iconic because of how Buffalo '66 presented its graphical signage. You can make big claims about being a local and use it as a selling point for your film's authenticity, but what is the purpose if you don't capture the area's character?    

 

Another northern-born filmmaker who felt they had a golden ticket to depict these suburbs however they liked was Justin Kurzel. Snowtown (2011) on first release felt like a revelation. It had a high level of competence and a lot of skillful restraint in terms of naturalistic direction. But it's a film whose initial praise is now worth critical revision. In reality, its a film that depicts the lower-classes as entirely sub-human and takes the form of torture porn while dressed up as an art film. Ice cream vans with distorted chimes traveling across dilapidated expanses are hackneyed symbolism, naff comedic wide and suburban cliche.  


In the case of Emotion, I just think director Pete Williams has been out of town too long. He's quite proudly a rootless cosmopolitan who left for London to study filmmaking, worked overseas in advertising and corporate media such as Amazon Prime, Disney Plus and doesn't speak like he's ever lived in Elizabeth at all. Although I think the central concept is great, which is to meditate on Holden car production vanishing from Australia despite being so embedded in our psyche, I just think its development was rushed and the thriller narrative desperately forced around it. Rather than being life finding a way through cracks of concrete, it felt a bit astro-turfed.  

 

The film does have transcendent moments, some of the skateboarding and camera movement around this action is effective.. Empty tree-lined streets become a canvas to sketch movement through. Skate wheels transform dormant factory floors into playgrounds. Sequences like this often give us respite from the emo soundtrack with a recurring traditional score by Max Tulyewski, which does marry well with Johanis Lyons-Reid's images. These sequences make us feel the breeze and the score creates a delicateness for such moments.  


Some of the skateboarding sequences in Emotion Is Dead/The Last Grind (2023) are quite transcendent and one of the visual strengths of the film.


The pop-punk emo tracks used probably meant a lot to the director.. But I'm not sure how well they resonate for the audience. For me, It's like taking the worst of the tail-end of a genre, where it had become as emasculated as the hippies that punk originally came to depose and stripped it of much of its noise and texture.. All the while expecting me to feel pathos. I just don't think this music sub-genre stands the test of time. But the use of such material isn't as egregious as say The Hounds Of Love (2016) using Joy Division for its groan-inducing ending.. Director Pete Williams does at the very least use the music logically to evoke his youth. In that sense it is personal filmmaking.  

 

The inter-cutting with archival footage and empty factories is memorable. If the film didn't push such a slapped together narrative around it, we could have had more of a poetic art film. But much of this intertwined historic material does serve the central concept well and validates the overall experience. The central character being a young man with no economic future is an important lightning rod and substantial core of the picture. An every-boy and cipher for the radicalised zoomer denied their birthright.  


Intertwined in Emotion Is Dead/The Last Grind (2023) are on-location TV installations
that show archival material of a prouder and more successful Australia.

There is a class of filmmaking in this country where independents put some serious personal 

money into equipment and craft to deliver a product with a level of sheen that if you squint looks 

like Netflix. Lighting, high-end cameras, gimbels, rigs etc. These are usually made within popular 

genres such as horror, zombie, fantasy .. But what they often lack is a sensibility of their own .. 

It's like the filmmakers have missed a step, which is cinephilia and haven't drunk enough from the 

well, haven't paid their cinephilic dues.. They have the energy and passion but no reference points 

beyond Amazon Prime. Sometimes these productions feel like competent applications of youtube tutorials 

but appear otherwise empty. I often think these films would be better-off made on simpler 

equipment and shot in a rougher, more immediate way. The process itself forcing a unique 

sensibility upon the film-form as it closer resembles the narrative.

 
Emotion is a step-above this content, it often does have a sensibility of its own, especially with its interwoven bigger picture, but I still think it could have been better served if shot in a more raw 

style akin to the work of Larry Clark. Less would have been more when it came to dialogue and characterization. At times dramatically it felt like a TAFE short film and then at other moments 

it truly did soar cinematically, usually when the protagonist was soaring down the road through 

the breeze. But its mainstream commercial aesthetic shackles it, keeping intuition and discovery 

from rising to the surface. A strength of indie cinema is the opportunity to capture the real, 

accidental and what the universe offers through the process. Dry Winter (2021), a feature film 

made within Flinders University honours program, achieves an intuitive sensibility while also tackling the subject of deindustrialisation by depicting idle hands doing the devil's work. Dry Winter was also 

made on a fraction of Emotion's $300,000 budget.   

 

It's probably important to point out the obvious and something that parallels the grand narrative of 

Emotion. We don't really have a film industry. To say we have a film industry is like saying a 

government department is an industry. We are living off past glories of Mad MaxBad Boy BubbyCrocodile Dundee, Picnic At Hanging Rock and probably the most recent being Chopper or Wolf Creek. The Philippou brothers and James Wan have carved-out sizeable niches within the horror 

genre globally, but that doesn't constitute a national cinematic revival. There are only a few conventionally budgeted mainstream movies made here per year. And then a handful of art films competing for 

limited funding. Outside of that, we have renegades and those willing to work on minuscule 

budgets. That entire patchwork does not constitute a real industry. 


We are not the Hollywood of Asia.. We don't compete with Asia at all. Hence those working 

independently are often operating in isolation and with few peers doing the same thing. And this 

affects the work.. It's not a rigorous environment or culture.. Whether it's the layman lacking 

sophistication, the sophisticated making films for insular audiences or in Emotion's case the 

cashed-up coming from a corporate TV background ultimately landing a middling work. It's not an 

industry or culture with all pistons firing. How might this be remedied?


BUT if you are interested in understanding local cinema, Emotion should be seen and its ambition respected. It's a first feature and despite all my criticism it has some originality in it. And although we should look at all films on their merits and objectively compare them to the wider world of cinema, the fact that we
don't have a real industry does require us to appreciate how a work is made in isolation. And we will have
our own understanding of certain local particulars that an international audience would not. Even when
aspects of a work misfire, it can still be a film of historical importance and Emotion does take history 

head-on. 

 

Being self-funded, Pete William's film is able to critique (in the abstract) government, 

unions and international finance's role in destroying the city of Elizabeth. Australian films 

tend to ignore all this and go straight to critiquing the mostly men who were put out of 

work by such deindustrialisation, depicting them as savage animals like in Snowtown (2011). So 

as cartoonish as Emotion is at times, at least Williams gives the victims of oligarchy their dignity 

rather than sticking the boot in.   


If you would like a taste you can Check out the trailer


***********************************************
Mike Retter is a film director, of the indie feature Youth On The March, creator of the zine "Cinema Now", and the Podcast "Meat Bone Express", and part of the Port Film Co-op. This post was first published on Jan 27, 2026 on Bill Mousoulis's fabulous website PURE SHIT AUSTRALIA CINEMA © Mike Retter 2026



Friday, 13 February 2026

A NOTE FROM FILMMAKER BILL MOUSOULIS SEEKING FUNDING FOR HIS NEXT FILM


Hi everyone -

For my next feature film, I’m making something in association with the young Adelaide crew Moviejuice (a really vibrant group of filmmakers, actors, critics). It’s an anarchic comedy called CRISPY CRACKERS, and it’s inspired by the films of Jerry Lewis in particular. Official film funding for such a film is not an option (we tried with Adelaide Film Festival Investment Fund, but they didn’t come through), so we have put together a crowdfunding campaign, asking for the modest sum of $7,500 (and I will put in the same amount of money myself, from my own pocket), to get the film shot and edited.

Please contribute to this if you can.  Here’s the funding page

And here’s the Trailer we have put together - 


Thursday, 12 February 2026

CINEMA REBORN - FEBRUARY NEWSLETTER - 'Tell no lies': Four anti-colonial films by Sarah Maldoror and Flora Gomes

Cinema Reborn always hopes to draw its programme of new restorations from all corners. Our 2026 season will include two programmes devoted to the rich but virtually unknown cinema of Africa.  These programmes will be presented on a single evening in both Sydney and Melbourne.




Mortu Nega (Dir. Flora Gomes, Guinea-Bissau, 1988)

4K Restoration, Australian Premiere

‘Gomes often says that cinema is rhythm, music, and above all, light. His enormous sensitivity to social nuance and his tempered optimism fill in the chiaroscuros of the everyday.’ – Ela Bittencourt, Metrograph Journal

The year is 1973 – the tail end of Guinea-Bissau’s eleven-year war against Portuguese colonial rule. A woman, Diminga (Bia Gomes), searches for her wounded partner, Sako (Tunu Eugenio Almada), among the rebel forces at a military camp. When the story seamlessly skips ahead to the mid 1970s, guerilla warfare has given way to the couple’s life together as celebrations in their fledgling nation are dampened by straitened conditions.

The first fictional feature film produced in independent Guinea-Bissau, Mortu Nega dwells – as its title loosely translates – on ‘those whom death refused’. Flora Gomes’s representation of the struggle of everyday life as just another kind of war, and of how challenges are dealt with through tools and processes embedded in the native culture, echoes and fulfils the desire expressed by the revered anti-colonial leader, pan-Africanist and poet AmĂ­lcar Cabral: for Bissau-Guineans to film their own people, country and liberation.

The latest restoration from Martin Scorsese’s World Cinema Project, Mortu Nega is 

part of the African Film Heritage Project, an initiative created by The Film 

Foundation’s World Cinema Project, the Pan African Federation of Filmmakers 

and UNESCO – in collaboration with Cineteca di Bologna – to help locate, 

restore, and disseminate African cinema.

Introduced by Lucia Sorbera at Ritz Cinemas and Guido Melo at Lido Cinemas

For session times and tickets at the Ritz click on this link

For session times and tickets at the Lido click on this link




Festa: A Trilogy by Sarah Maldoror (France, Cape Verde, Guinea-Bissau 1979–1980, 91 minutes)

Australian Premiere, 4K Restoration

‘In this trio of shorts, Sarah Maldoror interweaves culture, tradition and politics, somewhere between documentary and poetry, culminating in a singular result.’ Annouchka de Andrade

‘In today’s times, it’s hard to imagine an artist – a Black woman, no less – being so principled yet so prolific, particularly in a medium as capital-intensive as cinema.’ – Devika Girish, The Film Comment Letter

Best known for her radical and groundbreaking 1972 film Sambizanga (Cinema Reborn 2022), Sarah Maldoror directed more than 45 shorts, documentaries and feature films from the 1960s until her passing in 2020. In 1979, having chronicled the anti-colonial liberation movements of Angola and Guinea-Bissau, Maldoror travelled to the islands of Cape Verde to document the nation’s first years of independence from Portuguese rule. Immortalising the period before the Guinea-Bissau coup d’Ă©tat of November 1980, in which the union of the two countries was broken, Maldoror produced three shorts: Fogo, l’Ă®le de feu (1979, 33 mins), Cap-Vertun carnaval dans le Sahel (1979, 28 mins)and Ă€ Bissau, le carnaval (1980, 30 mins). Forming a loose trilogy, these poetic documentaries beautifully capture the jubilance of Cape Verde and Guinea-Bissau’s Carnival and May Day preparations and festivities, serving as a testament to culture as the foundation of liberation.

Introduced by Annouchka de Andrade via video link.

For session times and tickets at the Ritz click on this link

For session times and tickets at the Lido click on this link


MULTI-TICKET DISCOUNT PASSES

We are responding to public demand by introducing a discount pass for those who want to see the maximum of Cinema Reborn at the lowest possible price. Five ticket passes are $80 and ten ticket passes are a super-bargain at $140. Each ticket allows a maximum of two redemptions per session.

To buy a pass for sessions at the Ritz click here and fill in the box for which Voucher you wish to purchase

To buy a pass for sessions at the Lido click here and fill in the box for which Voucher you wish to purchase.

EARLY PROGRAMME ANNOUNCEMENTS

We have already announced a bundle of titles that will screen in our 2026 season. For information about session times and links to bookings head to the Cinema Reborn website

CHARITABLE DONATIONS

Cinema Reborn charges regular Ritz and Lido admission prices with the lowest student discount tickets of any festival. We keep to these admission charges thanks to tax deductible donations from our friends and supporters. We have once again set up a page via the Australian Cultural Fund to receive donations of any size, large or small. You can find it IF YOU CLICK ON THIS LINK



Bill