Yahoo Italia Ricerca nel Web

Risultati di ricerca

  1. Australian Rules is a 2002 Australian sports drama film directed by Paul Goldman and starring Nathan Phillips, Luke Carroll, Tom Budge, Brian Torry and Lisa Flanagan. It was adapted from the novels Deadly, Unna? (1998) and Nukkin Ya [3] by Phillip Gwynne.

  2. 29 ago 2002 · Australian Rules: Directed by Paul Goldman. With Nathan Phillips, Luke Carroll, Lisa Flanagan, Tom Budge. In Prospect Bay, a remote outpost on the South Australian coast, two communities, the Goonyas and the Nungas, come together on the one field they have in common, the football field.

    • (853)
    • 3 min
    • Paul Goldman
    • 24
  3. Friends Gary Black (Nathan Phillips) and Dumby Red (Luke Carroll) are on the same soccer team in their coastal Australian town, but to local racists, they're a world apart: Gary is white and...

    • (27)
    • Paul Goldman
    • Drama
    • Nathan Phillips
  4. Australian Rules. 2002. Feature | 98mins | Completed. AUSTRALIAN RULES is based on the novel 'Deadly, Unna?' by Phillip Gwynne and set in a shabby little fishing village in outback South Australia.

  5. 2002 Directed by Paul Goldman. Friends Gary Black (Nathan Phillips) and Dumby Red (Luke Carroll) are on the same football team in their coastal Australian town. But to local racists, they’re a world apart: Gary is white and Dumby is an Aborigine. This becomes an issue when one of the team’s Aboriginal players becomes involved in a crime.

    • (316)
    • Adelaide Festival of Arts
    • Paul Goldman
  6. Australian Rules tells the story of racial tension in a small fictitious town in South Australia called Prospect Bay. The central character of the story is Blacky (Nathan Phillips), a young white man who is dominated by his violent father (Simon Westaway). According to the filmmakers this is a story about racism, and indeed it is.

  7. Summaries. In Prospect Bay, a remote outpost on the South Australian coast, two communities, the Goonyas and the Nungas, come together on the one field they have in common, the football field. But the underlying racism and class warfare threatens to make the team's greatest victories irrelevant.