Walkabout

Release Date: Available Now
Director/Cinematographer: Nicolas Roeg
Writers: James Vance Marshall (novel), Edward Bond (screenplay)
Starring: Jenny Agutter, David Gulpilil, Lucien John
Studio/Runtime: Criterion, 100 min.
After the 1990 Anjelica Huston vehicle The Witches, British director Nicolas Roeg slid into a netherworld of episodic TV fare and direct-to-video oblivion. But the man deserves a nod, if only for the heady run from his 1970 collaborative directorial debut Performance through 1980’s harrowing Bad Timing. (Just ask Wilco producer, former Sonic Youth guitarist and cinephile Jim O’Rourke, who has three solo albums that namecheck Roeg’s oeuvre.) But the director stands apart and above many of his contemporaries on the strength of one masterpiece alone: 1971’s Walkabout, a perfect cinematic experience.
Walkabout’s narrative follows an Australian sister and brother who encounter an indigenous boy performing the traditional Aboriginal coming-of-age rite: the walkabout. Based on the James Vance Marshall book of the same name, Edward Bond’s original screenplay totaled 14 pages (barely enough for a short film). In Roeg’s hands, it became a meditation on modern rituals and ancient ones, conflicts between the native Aboriginal and invasive European cultures, human language and storytelling, female and male gender roles and the misunderstanding between them, the cruelty of nature and the madness of the modern world.