Praise (film)

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Directed byJohn Curran
Written byAndrew McGahan
Based onPraise
by Andrew McGahan
Produced byMartha Coleman
Helen Watts
Praise
Directed byJohn Curran
Written byAndrew McGahan
Based onPraise
by Andrew McGahan
Produced byMartha Coleman
Helen Watts
Starring
CinematographyDion Beebe
Edited byAlexandre de Franceschi
Music byWarren Ellis
Antony Partos
Michael Turner
Production
company
Emcee Films
Distributed byStrand Releasing[1]
Release dates
Running time
98 minutes
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish
Box officeA$578,927[2]

Praise is a 1998 Australian drama film directed by John Curran and adapted by Andrew McGahan from his novel of the same name. The film stars Peter Fenton and Sacha Horler and is about two outcasts who fall into an unlikely relationship.

Gordon, a 25-year-old chain-smoking asthmatic who unhappily works at a Brisbane bottle shop, moves into a run-down residential hotel. He becomes embroiled in a romance with Cynthia, a former co-worker who suffers from eczema and low self-esteem. Gordon and Cynthia occupy themselves with drink, drugs, sex, and Scrabble. A love triangle arises when Gordon's former love, Rachel, comes back into his life.

Cast

Release

The film premiered at the 1998 Toronto International Film Festival.[1] It was also screened as part of the Panorama section at the 49th Berlin International Film Festival.[3]

Critical reception

Elvis Mitchell of The New York Times wrote Praise "is uncanny and sizzling because it has the apparently aimless feel of a bad love affair of youth, the kind of story you would overhear the thoughtless Gordon telling somebody; you would move your chair closer to catch every seamy, and often hilarious, detail."[4] He also praised Horler's performance and concluded, "Pungent, poignant and full of honest sentiment, Praise has a complicated emotional intelligence that is hard to come by in movies these days."[4]

TV Guide reviewed the filmed positively and said, "McGahan's novel was compared to Bret Easton Ellis's Less Than Zero in its depiction of anomic slackers numbing themselves with drugs and impersonal sex. But Charles Bukowski's pickled oeuvre is the better comparison; McGahan and filmmaker John Curran lack Ellis's delusions of glamour and their tour of the low life is sordid without being exploitative, coolly compassionate without in any way glossing over Gordon and Cynthia's crippling personal deficiencies. Their doomed fling is oddly hypnotic and ultimately haunting."[5] Mick LaSalle of the San Francisco Chronicle wrote, "Praise is fun and strange, yet remarkably warm in its look at characters who let their hearts out of the bag as unwitting acts of salvation and, at the same time, self-destruction. If you want an offbeat portrait of romance, this is the movie."[6]

On review aggregate website Rotten Tomatoes, Praise has an approval rating of 88% based on 8 reviews.[7] On Metacritic, the film has a score of 79 based on 12 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[8]

Awards and nominations

References

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