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    Walkabout (1971) + [Extras]

    Posted By: Rare-1
    Walkabout (1971) + [Extras]

    Walkabout (1971) + [Extras]
    BDRip | MKV | 1024 x 576 | AVC @ 1895 Kbps | 100 min | 2.09 Gb
    Audio: #1 English AC3 1.0 @ 192 Kbps, #2 English AC3 1.0 @ 160 Kbps, (Commentary) | Subs: English, (HOH)
    Genre: Adventure, Drama | UK

    A privileged British family consisting of a mother, a geologist father and an adolescent daughter and son, live in Sydney, Australia. Out of circumstance, the siblings, not knowing exactly where they are, get stranded in the Outback by themselves while on a picnic. They only have with them the clothes on their backs - their school uniforms - some meagre rations of nonperishable food, a battery-powered transistor radio, the son's satchel primarily containing his toys, and a small piece of cloth they used as their picnic drop-cloth. While they walk through the Outback, sometimes looking as though near death, they come across an Australian boy who is on his walkabout, a rite of passage into manhood where he spends months on end on his own living off the land. Their largest problem is not being able to verbally communicate. The boy does help them to survive, but doesn't understand their need to return to civilization, which may or may not happen based on what the Australian boy ends up doing.

    IMDB 7.7/10 from 14427 users

    Director: Nicolas Roeg
    Writer: Edward Bond (screenplay), James Vance Marshall (novel)
    Actors: Jenny Agutter, Luc Roeg, David Gulpilil, John Meillon
    Rated: R
    Runtime: 100 min

    For many years now, one legendary film has appeared on every list of fine movies that are missing from distribution and home video. That film is Nicolas Roeg’s Walkabout, the 1971 drama about a fourteen-year-old girl and her little brother, who are lost in the Australian outback and are saved by a young Aborigine who is, indeed, walking about as his rite of passage into manhood. No one who saw Walkabout has ever forgotten it, and now it has been restored with some additional scenes in a new director’s cut on this Criterion edition.

    Walkabout (1971) + [Extras]


    Roeg was a cinematographer before he was a director, and this is one of the best-photographed films ever. It’s also a meditation about living on earth, which finds beauty in the way mankind’s intelligence can adapt to harsh conditions while civilization just tries to wall them off or pave them over. Walkabout is one of the great films.

    Walkabout (1971) + [Extras]


    Is Walkabout only about what it seems to be about? Is it a parable about noble savages and the crushed spirits of city dwellers? That’s what the film’s surface suggests, but I think it’s about something deeper and more elusive: the mystery of communication. In the end, lives are destroyed, in one way or another, because two people could not invent a way to make their needs and dreams clear.

    Walkabout (1971) + [Extras]


    The movie takes its title from a custom among the Australian Aborigines: At the time of transition to young manhood, an adolescent went on a “walkabout” for six months in the outback, surviving (or not) depending on his skills at hunting, trapping, and finding water in the wilderness.

    Walkabout (1971) + [Extras]


    Aboriginal culture has a less linear sense of time than that of a clock-bound society, which the time-line of the movie suggests. Does everything happen exactly in the sequence it is shown? Does everything even happen at all? These questions lurk around the edges of the story, which is seemingly simple: The three young travelers survive in the outback because of the Aborigine’s skills. And communication is a problem, although more for the girl than for her little brother, who has a child’s ability to cut straight through the language to the message.

    Walkabout (1971) + [Extras]


    I think the film is neutral about each character’s goals. Like its lizards that sit unblinking in the sun, it has no agenda for them. The film sees the life of civilization as arid and unrewarding, but only easy idealism allows us to believe that the Aborigine is any happier, or that his life is more rewarding (the film makes a rather unpleasant point of the flies constantly buzzing around him).

    Walkabout (1971) + [Extras]


    Nicolas Roeg does not subscribe to pious sentimental values; he has made that clear in the quarter-century since Walkabout, in a series of films that have grown curiouser and curiouser: In Don’t Look Now, The Man Who Fell to Earth, Insignificance, Track 29, Bad Timing, and other films—many of them starring his wife, Theresa Russell—he has shown characters trapped inside their own obsessions, fatally unable to communicate with others; all sexual connections are perverse, damaging, or based on faulty understandings.

    Walkabout (1971) + [Extras]


    In Walkabout, the crucial detail is that the two teenagers never find a way to communicate, not even by using sign language. This is in part because the girl feels no need to do so: Throughout the film she remains implacably middle-class and conventional, and regards the Aborigine as more of a curiosity and convenience than as a fellow spirit, ignoring his sexual advances.

    Walkabout (1971) + [Extras]


    The movie is not the heartwarming story of how the girl and her brother are lost in the outback and survive because of the knowledge of the resourceful Aborigine. It is about how all three are still lost at the end of the film—more lost than before, because now they are lost inside themselves instead of merely adrift in the world.

    Walkabout (1971) + [Extras]


    The film suggests that all of us are the captives of environment and programming: There is a wide range of experiment and experience that remains forever invisible to us, because it falls in a spectrum we simply cannot see.

    Walkabout (1971) + [Extras]


    Extras Include's:
    • Theatrical Trailer
    • Video Interview Jenny Agutter
    • Video Interview Nicolas Roeg

    Walkabout (1971) + [Extras]


    More Screenshots:

    Walkabout (1971) + [Extras]



    General
    Unique ID : 75688526840122467241890231776616885319 (0x38F1147CC460C753B38E4922BA07AC47)
    Complete name : G:\Walkabout\Walkabout.mkv
    Format : Matroska
    Format version : Version 4 / Version 2
    File size : 1.61 GiB
    Duration : 1h 40mn
    Overall bit rate : 2 292 Kbps
    Encoded date : UTC 2014-09-19 11:05:43
    Writing application : mkvmerge v6.7.0 ('Back to the Ground') 64bit built on Jan 9 2014 18:03:17
    Writing library : libebml v1.3.0 + libmatroska v1.4.1

    Video
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    Format : AVC
    Format/Info : Advanced Video Codec
    Format profile : High@L4.1
    Format settings, CABAC : Yes
    Format settings, ReFrames : 8 frames
    Codec ID : V_MPEG4/ISO/AVC
    Duration : 1h 40mn
    Bit rate : 1 895 Kbps
    Width : 1 024 pixels
    Height : 576 pixels
    Display aspect ratio : 16:9
    Frame rate mode : Constant
    Frame rate : 23.976 fps
    Color space : YUV
    Chroma subsampling : 4:2:0
    Bit depth : 8 bits
    Scan type : Progressive
    Bits/(Pixel*Frame) : 0.134
    Stream size : 1.33 GiB (83%)
    Writing library : x264 core 142 r2453 ea0ca51
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    Language : English
    Default : Yes
    Forced : No
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    Transfer characteristics : BT.709
    Matrix coefficients : BT.709

    Audio #1
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    Format : AC-3
    Format/Info : Audio Coding 3
    Mode extension : CM (complete main)
    Format settings, Endianness : Big
    Codec ID : A_AC3
    Duration : 1h 40mn
    Bit rate mode : Constant
    Bit rate : 192 Kbps
    Channel(s) : 1 channel
    Channel positions : Front: C
    Sampling rate : 48.0 KHz
    Bit depth : 16 bits
    Compression mode : Lossy
    Stream size : 138 MiB (8%)
    Title : main audio
    Language : English
    Default : Yes
    Forced : No

    Audio #2
    ID : 3
    Format : AC-3
    Format/Info : Audio Coding 3
    Mode extension : CM (complete main)
    Format settings, Endianness : Big
    Codec ID : A_AC3
    Duration : 1h 40mn
    Bit rate mode : Constant
    Bit rate : 160 Kbps
    Channel(s) : 1 channel
    Channel positions : Front: C
    Sampling rate : 48.0 KHz
    Bit depth : 16 bits
    Compression mode : Lossy
    Stream size : 115 MiB (7%)
    Title : Audio commentary by director Nicolas Roeg and Jenny Agutter.
    Language : English
    Default : No
    Forced : No

    Text
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    Format : VobSub
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    Codec ID : S_VOBSUB
    Codec ID/Info : The same subtitle format used on DVDs
    Title : English HOH
    Language : English
    Default : No
    Forced : No


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