The atmosphere of this one is through the roof brilliant.
Some spoilers follow. . .
What this production lacks in drama (it's more aftermath than happening), it more than makes up for in atmospherics, language and terrific acting.
Its like an arty, yet visceral, emotive and horrific, version of one of those theme park rides that transport you precisely to a time and place, here an arid lonely outback Australia where a man has been abusing his wife, while his children look on. She has killed him, and now we simmer in hot red dirt, riding an atmosphere of loneliness, aridness, decay and death for an hour as the killer wife and her two kids cope with the cocktail of relief, horror and fear of potential repercussions.
The acting is incredible. You've got the world's most emotional vessel in Mariah Gale (nobody but nobody summons rivers of tears the way she can) as the killer wife, numb, guilt-ridden, fearful, in a dream state. And she's supported by two mesmerising performances from Elizabeth Dulau and Alexandra Jensen as her daughters, the former locked in tentative fear for what will happen next, the latter buzzing with electric wonder at the newness of everything that is happening for the first time.
Gale's killer mum can remember a time when her husband promised something more than endless abuse, so there is a strange dreamy numbness and wistful sadness to everything she does.
This show does everything horror does best (making human beings feel like nothing but rotting meat) despite the lack of actual incident for much of the running time. The language is riveting regarding the decay of the corpse and the women's visceral reactions to it.
This hour long piece is a total trip, to an Australia that is dark, weird, emotive, bloody, lonely, strange and familiar all at once. 4 and a half stars from me. :0
Yeah completely second this. The rhyme, the switching and passing of characters - brilliant. I was not one bit surprised Nick Cave is a big fan of this, it's an Australian murder ballad.
I saw this earlier in the week and was impressed as well. The acting was strong though the direction lacked a little by making the three women face out into the horseshoe-sat audience so much rather than looking in at each other. I was a bit disappointed that the writing provided secondary characters who were all kind to the three protagonists, I would've preferred some more tension. I also couldn't get a grip on the era it was set in. The costumes suggested early C20 but regular references to trucks suggested nearer contemporary? But that's nit-picking. It was well written and well performed and an enjoyable hour spent in E&C.
Post by merrilywereadalong on Jun 22, 2024 19:46:15 GMT
Oh this was thrilling. An hour that felt like a true full meal and anchored by three full throttle, dynamite performances (particularly Mariah Gale who I will now be going to see anything she's in) I thought the writing was hypnotic and chilling and genuinely kept me on edge. a strong 4.5 stars for me! Pity it's not running longer but so glad I caught this right before it closed
Too late to help, but a quick endorsement of all the above; am kicking myself that I left it too late in the run to see this superb piece twice, as it would have more than justified a second (or even a third) viewing. Dense, complex but also taut and visceral, and illuminated by superb performances all round, this is definitely something to see if it ever comes back/pops up elsewhere...
Post by merrilywereadalong on Jul 12, 2024 19:49:08 GMT
Imagine looking up in the M&S fruit section and almost colliding into Mariah Gale just now!! I didn't say anything but inside I was fan girl-ing to the extreme like you'd think I'd just ran into Taylor Swift