Screened as part of NZIFF 2018

Breath 2017

Directed by Simon Baker World

Coming of age in 1970s Western Australia is poignantly evoked in Simon Baker’s visually poetic adaptation of Tim Winton’s novel about a young man’s obsession with surfing and the allure of living dangerously.

116 minutes DCP

Rent

Director

Producers

Mark Johnson
,
Simon Baker
,
Jamie Hilton

Screenplay

Gerard Lee
,
Simon Baker
,
Tim Winton. Based on the novel by Tim Winton

Photography

Marden Dean

Editor

Dany Cooper

Production designer

Steven Jones-Evans

Costume designer

Terri Lamera

Music

Harry Gregson-Williams

With

Simon Baker (Sando)
,
Elizabeth Debicki (Eva)
,
Samson Coulter (Pikelet)
,
Ben Spence (Loonie)
,
Richard Roxburgh (Mr Pike)
,
Rachael Blake (Mrs Pike)

Festivals

Toronto 2017

Actor Simon Baker, star of The Guardian and The Mentalist, returns to his native Australia for his directorial debut adapting, with Top of the Lake writer Gerard Lee, Tim Winton’s celebrated novel.

The film follows two teenage boys (both played by first-time actors who grew up surfing competitively), Pikelet (Samson Coulter) and Loonie (Ben Spence) awkwardly carrying their crappy surfboards out to the beach on their bikes. When former surf champ Sando (Simon Baker) takes the boys under his wing, their passion for the surf becomes an obsession with upping the odds. While Loonie lives up to his name when it comes to taking risks on the ocean, Pikelet is more contemplative and hesitant, embracing Sando as an exciting role model while observing the quiet commitment of his own father (Richard Roxburgh) to a simple family life. Sando’s intriguingly sidelined wife (Elizabeth Debicki) however hints at risks to be taken ashore.

The surfing scenes are magnificently shot, often under dark skies, tracking the cresting waves with grace and capturing the boys’ relationship with the water with intimacy and immediacy. The film suggests deep undercurrents beneath its straightforward narrative: the relationship between Pikelet and his father told in shifting glances; Pikelet’s realisation of the implications of his decisions more observed than stated.

Dealing with the basic, universal elements of budding manhood with simplicity and integrity, the film speaks with loving nostalgia about passion, risk and the ripples of our decisions. Winton provides the ultimate seal of approval, doing the voiceovers of Pikelet as an adult looking back. — Chris Kirk