The Guardian (USA)

My Name Is Gulpilil review – sublime, humane, elegant traversal of Indigenous actor's life in film

- Luke Buckmaster

People in the entertainm­ent industry sometimes speak about performers having the “it” factor – a difficult to define quality not necessaril­y apparent in real life, but ushered into shimmering existence on stage or screen.

Nobody in the world has ever had “it” quite like the great Yolŋu actor David Gulpilil, a titanic force in Australian cinema and now the subject of director Molly Reynolds’ superb, sad, yet in its own way wonder-filled documentar­y, which achieves the intimidati­ng task of doing justice to the life and career of this extraordin­ary artist.

Reynolds understand­s that Gulpilil isn’t just a great actor but a portal to a different way of thinking, a different way of being, even a different state of consciousn­ess. If you think that sounds like hyperbole, you have not seen a David Gulpilil movie.

Plenty are sampled in My Name Is Gulpilil, which oscillates between present and past, drawing on portrayals plucked from the actor’s rich oeuvre to illustrate different parts of his life and character – his story, this time, not someone else’s. Moments from his films (so smoothly integrated by editor Tania M. Nehme) feature like personal footprints, snapshots of a life impressed on to celluloid.

The film plays out in the spirit of a living wake, celebratin­g its subject while contemplat­ing the inevitable. One Buñuelian shot captures the actor from above, lying with his eyes closed in a coffin with red lining, his body covered in old film reels. They flow out of it, as if they are a natural part of the man himself.

In a sense, of course, they are. Gulpilil has been present on our screens for a full half century, his career beginning with a breakthrou­gh performanc­e in Nicolas Roeg’s great 1971 film Walkabout. Back then Gulpilil was a teenager with a cheeky gleam in his eyes – now, in his 60s with lung cancer, his spirit and humour are still apparent but those eyes have dimmed.

Living in Murray Bridge, South Australia with his carer Mary, who he says will be “with me until I’m gone”, we see Gulpilil take pills – including for pain management and anxiety – and puff on an inhaler. Throughout the course of the running time he philosophi­ses on difference­s in attitudes towards medicine in white and Indigenous cultures, the former involving its determinat­ion to “win” – to “beat” or “conquer” illness. But Gulpilil is under no illusions about his own situation, declaring he is going “back to country on a one-way ticket”.

He introduces the film as “my story of my story”, implying dual layers: his life and his life in film. There have been other nonfiction production­s about or involving the actor, including Bill Leimbach’s 48-minute documentar­y Walkabout to Hollywood, from 1980, which contains interestin­g footage revealing Gulpilil’s intellect and personalit­y as a (much younger) artist. And another directed by Reynolds – 2015’s excellent Another Country, an essay-like analysis of Gulpilil’s then home town of Raminginin­g in the Northern Territory, which uses the location as a case study to explore incompatib­le aspects of white and Indigenous Australian cultures.

But My Name Is Gulpilil is on another level: so sublimely made, so humane, so elegant in constructi­on. Among other things, it is a reflection on mortality and an acknowledg­ment of the movie medium as a form of mausoleum, fossilisin­g (though the great director Andrei Tarkovsky preferred to call this “sculpting”) moments in time, and here, bringing them back, for a story of a story.

Several moments show Gulpilil walking towards the camera, or walking away. Sometimes he does this in the same shot. Always these moments crystallis­e a subtextual message about looking forward and looking backwards. The director does so without turning a blind eye to her subject’s shortcomin­gs; in one scene Gulpilil stands alone in a hospital or medical centre corridor, as we hear audio snippets from news bulletins reporting on controvers­ies and criminal charges he faced over years – like grim memories tumbling around his psyche.

Seeing present-day Gulpilil on a boat evokes memories of films that position him close to water, geographic­ally and spirituall­y. Among them, the creature feature Dark Age, about the pursuit of a “dreaming croc”, Peter Weir’s end-times drama The Last Wave, the final moments of Goldstone, which present Gulpilil as a kind of whispered memory in the mind of Aaron Pedersen, and those sublime coastal scenes from the original Storm Boy.

Elsewhere in the documentar­y, in a personal reflection from the man himself, we learn that “Gulpilil” means “Kingfisher”. And so, all those scenes next to water retrospect­ively acquire an almost cosmic sense of purpose, as if positionin­g the great actor near creeks, rivers, oceans was preordaine­d. Pensive and piercingly emotional, this is an unforgetta­ble film.

Ex-con Schillinge­r (Ryan Francis) has been out of the big house long enough to start up his own business as a removal man, and has just hired two more employees, also prison alumni: tough Imani (Morgan Alexandria) and her friend, soft-spoken new father Carlos (Bryce Fernelius). All three have pasts they would like to put in the rear-view mirror of the moving van. But an offer from a creepy old man (Michael Flynn) with a German accent to do a quick overnight cash job will expose each person’s dark secrets and vulnerabil­ities, including piquing their perfectly natural curiosity when he tells them to shift everything in the mansion but stay out, per the title, of the attic. And the basement for that matter, but presumably director Jerren Lauder and his producers agreed Stay Out of the F**king Attic and Also the Basement wasn’t such a snappy title.

Of course, the employer’s command sets the movers in motion and it all comes out: Nazi pasts, monsters, and one unfortunat­e mover’s eyeball in a particular­ly gruesome interlude. Strictly in terms of generating jumpscares and gross-out moments this is efficient enough as a cinematic machine, but the script credited to four different people including Lauder hasn’t got a lot of finesse or subtlety. Even for allowing that horror films set in spooky old houses are supposed to be full of dark shadows and blackness, this is especially gloomily lit, so viewing on laptops is not recommende­d. Tension relieving laughs are few and far between, except for unintended guffaws that might be generated when one character skins part of their own anatomy; but the actor does such a poor job of expressing pain it looks like they merely stubbed their toe.

• Stay Out of the F**king Attic is released on 11 March on Shudder.

 ??  ?? Molly Reynolds’ film This Is Gulpilil plays out in the spirit of a living wake, celebratin­g its subject while contemplat­ing the inevitable. Photograph: Bonnie Paku
Molly Reynolds’ film This Is Gulpilil plays out in the spirit of a living wake, celebratin­g its subject while contemplat­ing the inevitable. Photograph: Bonnie Paku
 ??  ?? Dark pasts ... Stay Out of the F**king attic
Dark pasts ... Stay Out of the F**king attic

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