Empire (UK)

THE NEW BOY

CATE BLANCHETT RETURNS TO OZ

- ★★★ OUT 15 MARCH / CERT 15 / 96 MINS JOHN NUGENT

DIRECTOR Warwick Thornton

CAST Cate Blanchett, Aswan Reid, Deborah Mailman, Wayne Blair

PLOT Australia, the 1940s. A boy (Reid) is taken from the Outback to live in a Catholic oprhanage — where his healing powers shock Sister Eileen (Blanchett).

AS AN AUSTRALIAN Aboriginal child, Warwick Thornton was sent to a Christian boarding school, run by monks and nuns. That formative experience inspired The New Boy, the filmmaker’s seventh feature — but don’t expect a straightfo­rward slice of direct autobiogra­phy. It is a curious confection, with a tone that flits between a serious study of colonialis­m and religion, and something more fantastica­l or supernatur­al. It even has an unexpected Weekend At Bernie’s-esque subplot. And it isn’t the sort of film to leave you with easy answers.

Cate Blanchett — in her first Australian role in several years — plays Sister Eileen, the leader of a Catholic mission in Australia’s Northern Territory. After the supreme, overbearin­g confidence of her performanc­e in 2022’s

TÁR, there’s a fascinatin­g nervous energy to Eileen: seemingly as fearful of her faith as she is beholden to it. She is naive and misguided but also quietly cunning, signing letters of official business ‘Don Peter’, after the now-dead patriarch of the mission, and pretends to be him for the benefit of delivery men. Even when the character feels occasional­ly underwritt­en, Blanchett is — of course — never less than compelling.

The nuns’ mission’s delicate equilibriu­m is thrown off-balance when the unnamed new boy arrives, and Thornton conjures a wonderfull­y unguarded performanc­e out of newcomer Aswan Reid, who moves about the world as scruffily and messily as his curly blond locks. He is a ball of energy and innocence, and the film plays through his lively eyes, almost as if it’s an unorthodox coming-of-age story. A magical spark of light follows the new boy, implying healing powers, with a lens flare that recalls a 1980s Amblin adventure; elsewhere, Thornton’s camera feels almost Terrence Malick-ian, taking full advantage of the dusty desert sunrises.

There is a deep, abiding spirituali­ty to the film, and Thornton seems to draw a line of comparison between Christian mysticism and the Earth-centred ‘geosophica­l’ Aboriginal belief systems: are the two traditions not so different, after all? Or are they wholly incompatib­le? It’s not clear what position the film is taking, an ambiguity that can feel confoundin­g. Instead, Thornton luxuriates in studious, slow-burn pacing, too often seemingly just treading water.

What feels clear, though, is the deliberate setting of this tale in time and place. It is a deeply Australian story, rooted in its shameful history (the new boy is snatched against his will, a symptom of the country’s racist assimilati­on laws) and the eventual imposition of a Western name on him feels symbolic, the loss of innocence and identity. The New Boy’s rumination­s don’t always connect, but it does make us wonder whose souls really need saving.

VERDICT A gentle, odd little Australian fable. Warwick Thornton’s film has a lot of thoughts to process, and while they don’t always cohere, the performanc­es from Blanchett and Reid keep it interestin­g.

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 ?? ?? Clockwise from main: Pitch perfect — Cate Blanchett; Aswan Reid as the boy; On a mission.
Clockwise from main: Pitch perfect — Cate Blanchett; Aswan Reid as the boy; On a mission.

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