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The Combination

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The Combination (2009)

February. 26,2009
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6.1
| Drama
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Set in the maligned western suburbs of Sydney, Lebanese-Australian John gets out of gaol to discover his younger brother Charlie is caught up with drugs, hookers and crime. Charlie oscillates between the streets and school. Daily clashes between Scott and Charlie's gang escalate. This feud spills into the streets in a territory and identity battle that turns bloody.

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Dotbankey
2009/02/26

A lot of fun.

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Beystiman
2009/02/27

It's fun, it's light, [but] it has a hard time when its tries to get heavy.

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Sharkflei
2009/02/28

Your blood may run cold, but you now find yourself pinioned to the story.

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Leoni Haney
2009/03/01

Yes, absolutely, there is fun to be had, as well as many, many things to go boom, all amid an atmospheric urban jungle.

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dbborroughs
2009/03/02

A young Australian man of Lebanese descent is released from prison. Looking to start his life over and get back on track he takes a job in a gym and tries to make something happen with a nice young girl he rescues from some street toughs. But complications arise as his high school aged brother begins to drift down the same path that he once was one. Will his younger brother ruin not only his life but the lives of everyone around him? Very good look at family, crime, being an outsider and dealing with the lines that other people draw (much of the film deals with how Australians view minorities). Its a well acted well made movie that speaks volumes about how any minority group must fight to be respected and not be reduced to the stereotypes that society at large creates for it. I like that this is story for everywhere not just Australia . I like that there is a great deal going on, that its not just one thing (say the crime story). The cast is great. I really liked this. Its worth seeing.

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dba9000
2009/03/03

This is a horrible film made to glorify Lebanese gangsters as hero's. Not to mention the acting is just stupid most of the time. Most of this film contains young Lebanese men purporting that their way of life is somehow more meaningful then those who obey laws and regulation of a country.Before a film showing Lebanese youth as hardcore gangsters, I think the creator should consider perhaps making a film based on a Australian-Lebanese people in a love story, its a better start to a Australian film industry in the eyes of the rest of the world.My advice is to rent a Bollywood musical instead, you'll feel better about life at the end of it.

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peter henderson
2009/03/04

Mention that catch phrase, "Australian values" and you will only be taken seriously by the rather unpleasant Nazi types who whipped up the Cronula anti Lebanese riots a couple of years ago (They were referred to briefly in the "Bra Boys" documentary narrated by Russel Crowe and form a back drop to the dramatic culmination of this film). John (George Basha), the hero in "Combination" dismisses Australian values as no more substantial than football and beer drinking.But the film makes the case for an Australian culture, Australian values that exclude the use of guns and vendettas as a means of settling conflict. The heroine's father tells his daughter, Sydney (Clare Bowen), that he was threatened by a Lebanese worker whom he had to dismiss from his job some years ago. He has no objection against the Lebanese people who have transformed his neighbourhood – just the fact that guns are now a commonplace item in the community in which he raised her. That is not a cheap shot by a bigot. It is a reasonable statement of fact. The hero of the film contemplates killing the criminal who has murdered his brother. He is encouraged to do so by the killer's neighbours when he confronts him, gun in hand. But he rejects the idea and (hopefully) renders his brother's killer impotent by publicly humiliating him. That is an example of Australian values. It is a valid difference between the more unpleasant aspects of the culture in Lebanon and that in Australia and it is worth celebrating. "Combination" does just that in a remarkable and satisfying manner.There is another really affirming idea embodied in the script, written by the George Basha, the Lebanese-Australian lead actor. It is an aboriginal Australian who councils him against a vendetta and provides the assistance necessary to extricate himself and his brother from the criminal milieu in which they have become mired The one thing that all the people who criticize Baz Lurhman's film, "Australia", fail to perceive is that it demands that all Australians recognize that the Aboriginal inhabitants have had a set of values (culture) for thousands of years that could be held up as instructive for those who have settled on their land. It is a rare thing to see this virtue celebrated in Australian literature. "Combination" seems to reinforce that notionBut all this may make the film sound preachy and sanctimonious. It is anything but that. It contains uniformly fabulous performances, script and direction that give the film narrative momentum and cinematography and sound that transports the viewer into the locales in which it was filmed. Director David Field, who created that wonderful character Acko in Gregor Jordan's film "Two Hands" some years ago, gives Basha the necessary space to concoct a character whose smouldering, barely restrained, macho authority brings to mind Richard Burton as Jimmy Porter in "Look Back in Anger" or Marlon Brando as Stanley Kowalski in "Streetcar Named Desire". His direction has more of the operatic tone of an Elia Kazan "Streetcar" than the laid back bravura of a Gregor Jordan – Brian Brown "Two Hands", but let's put that down to the hot blooded Leb culture he is portraying on the screen. Clare Bowen's touching portrayal of a fresh faced young Aussie girl is a world away from Vivien Leigh's jaded Blanche or (perhaps more appropriately) Kim Hunter's Stella. But it is none the less powerful for that. Such is the quality of the script she is given to perform, that it does not take much to imagine her parents being seduced by the virtues of the Lebanese culture with which she has been smitten. The exotic cuisine, the foot stomping, hypnotic dance, the loyalty to family. Wed that to the virtues of an Australian culture that embraced and absorbed more Jewish victims of Nazi concentration camps than any other country and turned Melbourne into the second largest Greek city in the world and you have a flawed but none the less worthy place to bring up the child gestating in Sydney's womb. Surely that is worthy of celebration When a country's film industry can not only document the problems it faces but also suggest ways in which they can be overcome with such a keen eye and in such an entertaining manner, things can't be as bad as the Nazi types would like to have you believe. As Rampaging Roy Slaven, that other Australian prophetic voice would say, "This is a good news story"Bravo "Combination" You really rock!

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Mozjoukine
2009/03/05

THE COMBINATION is the first Australian film to be shown in it's country of origin this year and it's already become a news story - not for it's quality but because there have been incidents between what we are told are Lebanese gang members and theatre staff.It would be nice if the film were to prove something substantial. What it is however is a passable gang warfare subject, made without undue sensationalism (it is particularly timid with sex) and preaching anti violence. The inclusion of recent race riot TV actuality tells us they want to be taken seriously.The film takes a predictable multicultural line with old Australia dismissed as football, beer and meat pies, as against the leather lounges and sumptuous Arab meals with music to which hard man writer-star Basha introduces so blonde object of his affections Bowen, who comes from a family where scotch on the rocks seems to be the main food item. The Lebanese gang has one Asian kid, though he does back off when it's time to face off with the so mean (white) drug pushers. Basha gets a job in a gym run by stand up aborigines. The white kids spit and mug solitary members of the other gang.The dynamic of school yard gangs is better, though we can't but wonder when the kids get to do any study, even though younger brother Dirani does once make it as far as the library.One note performances are strong and the Western Sydney setting is effective and still unfamiliar. Particularly choice are the pusher's neighbors urging Basha to blow the low life away in the film's most inventive scene.It would be nice to say this independently financed item was a break away from the blandness of funded filming here. However it is formula and lacks the dynamism of US films that covered this area - the work of Phil Karlson or young Scorsese and particularly American HISTORY X which appears to have inspired plot elements.Those involved attack with a determination that it would be nice to see rewarded with worthwhile careers but they have the dis-spiriting history of Astralian production against them.

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