The Nightingale
— I knew this film was controversial, but I really wasn’t expecting the viewing experience to be as uncomfortable as it was. It’s a brutal tale of disrespect for human life, evidenced in rape, murder, revenge, racism, unfairness, inequality, and almost any other form of pain one human can cause another. Everyone is either uncaring or adversarial. While the antagonists have no redeeming aspects in the story line, it’s hard to find the protagonists as likable either except, perhaps, with a revisionist eye looking for some kind of 19th century “Me Too” moment of retribution. The journey feels like a mythic tale of good vs evil, but it's more complex than a simple tale of vengeance. In the end, what seemed to be a straightforward tale of a woman's revenge, widens to become a tale of the bias everyone has based on their culture and personal history, the line between morality and amorality, the effects of colonization on aboriginal people, and what responsibility each person has for what happened in the past and where we are today. I liked the film but it’s not for the squeamish and, wonderful and atmospheric as the journey and the dreams are, I wonder if it couldn't use a little more editing.
[2018. 136 min. Written and directed by Jennifer Kent. Starring Aisling Franciosi, Sam Claflin, and Baykali Ganambarr.]
https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/the-nightingale-2019