Geelong Advertiser

Aussie nightmare

- LEIGH PAATSCH

THE AUSTRALIAN DREAM (MA15+) Starring: Adam Goodes, Stan Grant, Gilbert McAdam, Nathan Buckley, Andrew Bolt, Michael O’Loughlin. Calling time on a game that’s been played for too long.

THERE will be no more important film released in this country in 2019 than The Australian Dream.

The second of two recent documentar­ies to feature indigenous Australian rules champion Adam Goodes leaves a devastatin­g first impression.

Not just for its urgent reporting from the frontlines of race relations in Australia right now but also for how it methodical­ly surveys a fault line that has been opening up beneath us as a nation for centuries.

For those who think they are already all across the Adam Goodes story and what it represents, the fresh perspectiv­e achieved here — at once maddening, saddening and genuinely inspiring — will come as a distinct shock.

Sure, the doco hits all the bullet points expected from a recounting of the fraught closing phase of Goodes’ career as an elite sportsman of colour.

The finger he pointed into the crowd that one fateful evening. The many, many fingers that were pointed right back at him as a result.

His time as Australian of the Year. A year in which a multitude of Australian­s howled him down for speaking up about what he believes in.

And the booing. The incessant, relentless booing. That ugly, murky tsunami of sound that ultimately swept Adam Goodes away.

Not just from the sport he once loved, or the public profile he once enjoyed, but far, far away from the strong and resilient human being he once knew himself to be.

However, unlike the recent TV doco The Final Quarter, Goodes himself is an active presence in The Australian Dream, giving a clear, strident and soulful voice to what he and others have gone through as indigenous Australian­s.

So too are many other protagonis­ts (intentiona­l and unintentio­nal) in his story to date.

Among those interviewe­d are Goodes’ former Sydney Swans coaches Paul Roos and John Longmire, teammate and cousin Michael O’Loughlin, Collingwoo­d club president Eddie McGuire, Collingwoo­d coach Nathan Buckley, explayer and current commentato­r Gilbert McAdam (best on ground for raw warmth and honesty) and broadcaste­r and columnist Andrew Bolt.

Perhaps most influentia­l of all contributo­rs is journalist Stan Grant, whose prolific recent writing on the past, present and future of indigenous Australia is redeployed by the documentar­y with eloquent force, reason and emotion. When it comes to acknowledg­ing and addressing where Australia stands as a nation on racism, The Australian Dream has a powerful potential to get more people thinking, talking and listening to each other than ever before.

A little more of the latter, and it just could bring an end to what, for some, has been an Australian nightmare.

 ??  ?? FRESH PERSPECTIV­E: Adam Goodes in the powerful documentar­y The Australian Dream.
FRESH PERSPECTIV­E: Adam Goodes in the powerful documentar­y The Australian Dream.
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