The Last Wave (1977) Directed by Peter Weir
In Sydney, David (Richard Chamberlain), a corporate lawyer, is asked to defend a small group of Aboriginals who are accused of killing a man. David has been having strange dreams, and as he digs deeper into the case, he begins to wonder whether he is somehow connected to the mystery in ways he can’t fathom. It becomes increasingly clear the man’s death may not have been a run-of-the-mill murder but a ritual execution of some kind involving ancient tribal costumes. The further David digs the more entangled he becomes in a world he can only barely comprehend. Director Peter Weir is trying to do something extremely challenging here, which is to introduce a tribal view of reality and incorporate that perspective into our Western way of thinking. It is a devilishly difficult trick and to me it has only been achieved once, by Thai director Apichatpong Weerasethakul’s
Uncle Boonme Who Can Recall His Past Lives. In that marvelous film two ways of sensing reality, the rural Thai Buddhist view, with its vastly different approach to the spirit world and reincarnation, and the traditional secular Western view, with its antipathy toward superstition, are allowed to exist simultaneously. The characters move between one and the other as easily as we might pour a glass of water.
Why does one movie work so well and the other so inadequately? For starters, Weerasethakul is at home in both worlds, so we get basically the view of an insider, someone comfortable with each tradition, someone who accepts each perspective as real. In
The Last Wave, Peter Weir is the outsider looking in. While sympathetic to Aboriginal culture in Australia, it is clear his understanding of it is limited. There is nothing seamless about
The Last Wave; the two cultures don’t comfortably co-exist. Rather it is like Weir has done a great deal of research but not enough to allow him to make sense of the interrelationships that the story requires. Why does Chris help David in the end? Why does David seem to kill Charlie in the end? What is this stuff about the Mulkuru? Why would that necessarily have anything to do with David? And on and on. There are just way too many loose ends where coherent answers need to be provided, too many blank spaces that never get filled in.
That being said Weir gets a lot of other things right. The atmosphere established in the first twenty minutes or so is deliciously disquieting, almost worthy (but not quite) of
Don’t Look Now. And the sense of foreboding that is created pervades the movie all the way through, even when the narrative itself is no longer convincing. Richard Chamberlain gives a perfectly judged performance of a man who is both trying to win a trial while at the same time being gobsmacked by the implications of what he is finding out, especially in regard to himself. He is certainly aided by Gulpilul, who provides a riveting performance in the pivotal role of Chris, an Aboriginal who feels caught between two worlds, the proverbial man in the middle. Despite the fact that the movie fails at the one thing it most needs to accomplish, I still like
The Last Wave very much. I find its atmosphere bewitching and even its failures seem to me a noble attempt to do something different. Too bad it is such a hard thing to do …but, as Weerasethakul has shown, hard doesn’t necessarily mean impossible.