Looking for Alibrandi (film)

Looking for Alibrandi is a 2000 Australian coming-of-age[3][4] film directed by Kate Woods and written by Melina Marchetta (which she adapted from her 1992 novel of the same name). The film is set in 1990s Sydney, New South Wales and features a cast of Australian actors, including Pia Miranda as Josephine Alibrandi, the film's main character; Anthony LaPaglia as her father, Michael Andretti, who left her and her mother before her birth; and Kick Gurry as Josie's love interest, Jacob Coote. The film won the Australian Film Institute Award for Best Film in 2000.

Looking for Alibrandi
Directed byKate Woods
Written byMelina Marchetta
Based onLooking for Alibrandi
by Melina Marchetta
Produced byRobyn Kershaw
StarringPia Miranda
Kick Gurry
Anthony LaPaglia
Greta Scacchi
Elena Cotta
CinematographyToby Oliver
Edited byMartin Connor
Music bySilverchair
Killing Heidi
Lo-Tel
Production
companies
Distributed byBeyond Distribution[1]
Release date
4 May 2000
Running time
103 minutes
CountryAustralia
LanguagesEnglish
Italian
Budget$4.5 million[2]
Box office$8.3 million

Plot edit

Josephine (nicknamed "Josie") Alibrandi (Pia Miranda) is an ambitious and outspoken 17-year-old Italian-Australian teenager who lives in Glebe, an inner-western suburb in Sydney, and is in her final year of high school. Josie is a scholarship student (also vice-captain) at the prestigious Catholic girls school St Martha’s (which is located in the eastern suburbs of Sydney), where she is completing her HSC. Most of the students are Anglo-Australian and from elite socio-economic backgrounds, and she experiences xenophobia and discrimination due to her Italian and working-class background (and also due to growing up in a single parent household). Josie attends St. Martha’s with her two best friends, Sera (Leanne Carlow) and Anna (Diane Viduka). She is friends with John Barton (Matthew Newton), who attends St Anthony’s College, the brother school of St Martha’s. She has romantic feelings for him, but has not explicitly disclosed them. He is the son of an influential politician, and feels pressure to follow in his father’s footsteps. Josie meets Jacob Coote (Kick Gurry), a rebellious and charismatic public school student, at an inter school debate. They dance together at Josie’s Year 12 formal, and even go on a date, but their personalities clash and they mutually decide to not pursue things further.

Josie’s mother, Christina Alibrandi (Greta Scacchi), gave birth to Josie out of wedlock when she was 17. Christina was disowned by her father, Francesco Alibrandi, and banished from the family home until his death. Josie has a rocky relationship with her grandmother/nonna, Katia Alibrandi (Elena Cotta), and they frequently argue. Christina never told Josie’s father, Michael Andretti (Anthony LaPaglia), that she had his baby. He moved to Adelaide to study law, and has since been working as a lawyer there. During Josie’s final year of high school, he visits Sydney temporarily for work and finds out about his child. Josie is initially uninterested in pursuing a father/daughter relationship with Michael, due to his absence for most of her life.

One day, Josie arrives at school and it is revealed that John Barton has taken his own life. Josie is devastated and struggles to cope with the loss. She seeks comfort in Jacob, and they begin a romantic relationship. Josie gets into a physical altercation with Carly (Leeanna Walsman) at school, and after Carly’s father threatens to sue, she asks Michael for his help. They bond as father and daughter and start spending time together. Michael decides to move back to Sydney for a more long-term basis.

Katia reveals a family secret; throughout their marriage, Francesco was abusive and neglectful towards her. She then had an affair with an Anglo-Australian man, Marcus Sandford, and he is the biological father of Christina. Francesco was aware that Christina was not his biological daughter because he is infertile, and this is one of the reasons why he resented her so much. Katia revealing this secret helps improve her relationship with Christina and Josie, and they subsequently grow closer as a family.

Cast edit

Production edit

The world premiere of the play Looking for Alibrandi, based on the novel, was created and performed by the PACT Youth Theatre in 1995.[5] It sold out for three seasons, leading to the making of a film adaptation.[6]

The film was produced by Robyn Kershaw.[7]

The entire film was filmed in Sydney, including such locations as Glebe (Alibrandi's house), Bondi Beach, Sydney Central Station on Eddy Avenue, the Concert Hall Northern Foyer, and entrance of Sydney Opera House (the Have your Say Day scene), George Street/Anzac Bridge (the scene where Jacob Coote sent Josephine Alibrandi home with his motorcycle), the Scots College and Kincoppal School were also used throughout the film, the main quadrangle of University of Sydney (the John Barton and Josephine Alibrandi scene), Village Cinema (Jacob and Josie's date) and Oporto (where Josie works part-time).[citation needed]

Critical acclaim edit

The film, while not well known in international markets, has received critical acclaim for its insights into both the second-generation-migrant experience and the universal human condition.

Looking for Alibrandi was Kate Woods' directorial debut in film; Woods was acclaimed for "giving [the film's] multicultural terrain the true respect and depth it deserves."[8]

Awards edit

Looking for Alibrandi won five awards at the 2000 AFI Awards:[7]

Box office edit

Looking for Alibrandi grossed approximately $8,300,000 at the box office in Australia.[9]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ [1]
  2. ^ Fry, Catherine. "Looking for Alibrandi". Murdoch University. Archived from the original on 23 July 2001. Retrieved 24 April 2013.
  3. ^ Speed, Lesley. "Looking For Alibrandi at 30: "No matter how far you run": Looking for Alibrandi and coming of age in Italo-Australian cinema and girlhood". Screening the past. Retrieved 11 April 2023.
  4. ^ Marsh, Walter (7 July 2022). "Looking For Alibrandi at 30: 'There's a white-hot shame about sticking out'". Guardian Australia. Retrieved 11 April 2023.
  5. ^ "PACT Centre for Emerging Artists facing an uncertain future". Australian Arts Review. 25 August 2020. Retrieved 10 May 2022.
  6. ^ Blake, Elissa (14 October 2014). "PACT Centre for Emerging Artists celebrates 50 years". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 10 May 2022.
  7. ^ a b "2000 Winners & Nominees". AFI Awards. Retrieved 25 November 2016.
  8. ^ "Looking for Alibrandi". ABC. Retrieved 25 April 2010.      
  9. ^ "Top 100 Feature Films of All Time". Screen Australia. Retrieved 13 February 2024.

External links edit