1h 37m available with multiple audio tracks and subtitles.

Stephan Elliott
Director

Guy Pearce
Keith Hall

Kylie Minogue
Kaye Hall

Jesse Denyer
Gerome Hall

Kotan Jacob
Andrew Hall

Alex Kotan
Damian Hall

Chelsea Jamieson
Liz Hall

Ava Taylor
Keira Hall

Kaitlyn Jesandry
Feb 1, 2024Energy abounds in this Aussie flick with lots of great set design and costumes to match and that's as far as it got for me. The rest was a bit of a dissapointment. Yes, I did expect a certain vulgarity to be present but some aspects of the narrative I just found just silly and at times plain stupid. Several minutes of voice over and fast cutting I found overwhelming at the start. There were some set pieces I found funny and was laughing along with the rest of the audience who were at times laughing more than I did, however it was these ridiculous parts of storyline that killed it for me. They kinda were absurd but the execution was where the word silly and stupid came in. Guy Pearce is always great but overall the cast's characters were not developed enough. Kylie Minogue and Jack Thompson's characters in particular were strangulated by the lack of thought given to them in the script. Mr Thompson's character just didn't go anywhere or vary. Not to blame him at all.....there was little heart in the characters overall. The sound mix however was well executed.

Koka
Feb 1, 2024I think everyone else here saw a different movie! I thought it was a great film. I mean it's no Puberty Blues but it was a silly light hearted comedy.

Pranitha Official
Feb 1, 2024Firstly the positives - it looks great and the cast is fun. Set in an idyllic beach suburb street, with colourful 70's designs, and a big cast (everyone's good in this, both parents and kids), most Australians of a certain age will find something to like about this. But it's humorous without being hilarious or much of a good time. The script and editing have made it a bit of a muddle. The two main kids are very sweet, but their storyline has no climax - do they actually go to Melbourne? The behaviour of he parents is a mystery - for a while they're all friends and up for kinky fun, then after a key party they're all enemies for no apparent reason. The gross humour of the final whale scene is a spectacular but emotionally empty note to end on. And one 70's aspect that is completely wrong is the language - it's crude and un-PC (which is accurate for 70's Australia but gets annoying after a while), but leaves out the brilliant Aussie slang of the time. See Puberty Blues for an example of it done right. That language is truly funny and endearing and would have lightened the film.

Mme Ceesay
Feb 1, 2024Surreal and hyper realistic, fast paced, challenging, wonderfully entertaining with a big BIG heart, irreverent without being malicious. I've watched Swinging Safari 3 times already and can't get enough of it. Films like this keeps bringing back to the movies.