The Combination
Review
by Anthony Morris
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Fresh out of
prison, John Morkos (George Basha, who also wrote the script) returns
to his western Sydney home looking to start over.
Unfortunately his younger brother Charlie (Firass Dirani) looks set to make all the same mistakes.
He's
hanging out with a gang, getting into fights, and when the local drug
lord makes him a (job) offer he can't refuse he is all too happy to
take the cash.
While John's working as a cleaner at a
tough-as-nails gym and trying to make it work with his all-Aussie
girlfriend Sydney (Clare Bowden), Charlie's getting in deeper and
deeper.
His life seems to be going down a too-familiar path, and not even his brother can save him from the consequences.
An Australian film set in the gritty inner-city usually means getting hammered about the head with the same old cliches, but The Combination (mostly) avoids the typical traps.
The
characters are well-drawn, the story is well-paced, we see the
consequences of a life of crime rather than just the glamour and the
racial divide between John and Sydney is simply a (painful) fact to be
dealt with rather than a massive injustice.
Though Sydney's racist parents do like a lecture...
David
Field is best known for his acting but in his first turn as director he
keeps the tone matter-of-fact even when the script gets wobbly.
As
a result this small film - while hardly earth shattering - gets the job
done in a way that a slew of more ambitious local films could only
dream of.
3 out
of 5
The Combination
Australian release: 26th February,
2009
Official
Site: The Combination
Cast: George Basha, Clare Bowen, Firass Dirani, Ali Haidar, Doris Younane
Director: David Field
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