Oddball (film)

Oddball

Theatrical film poster
Directed by Stuart McDonald
Produced by Sheila Hanahan
Stephen Kearney
Richard Keddie
Written by Peter Ivan
Starring Shane Jacobson
Coco Jack Gillies
Sarah Snook
Alan Tudyk
Music by Cezary Skubiszewski
Cinematography Damian Wyvill
Edited by Cindy Clarkson
Marcus D'Arcy
Max Miller
Distributed by Roadshow Films
Release dates
17 September 2015
Running time
95 minutes
Country Australia
Language English

Oddball is a 2015 Australian family film directed by Stuart McDonald. It was released in September 2015 and stars Shane Jacobson, Coco Jack Gillies, Sarah Snook and Alan Tudyk. It is based on a true story.[1]

Plot

On Middle Island off the coast of Warrnambool, little penguins have made their home, but foxes have found the island and have reduced the population of penguins. An eccentric chicken farmer named Swampy teams up with his granddaughter to train their mischievous dog, Oddball, to protect the penguins from these predators in an attempt to reunite his family and save their seaside town.

Cast

Reception

Oddball received positive reviews from critics and audiences, earning a 70% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes. Luke Buckmaster of The Guardian wrote "Some kinks in the writing notwithstanding, Oddball is fun and thoughtfully minded, with a sweet charm that endears from the get-go." Erin Free of Filmink wrote "Oddball's brand of fun-with-heart will hopefully click with local kids and their parents too." Matt Neal of "The Standard" gave a positive review, saying "You'd have to be heartless to hate Oddball."

Jake Wilson of the Sydney Morning Herald gave a negative review, writing "Unfortunately, they appear to have lost sight of the golden rule for family movies of this type, which is to keep the focus squarely on the animals or, failing that, on the kids." Sandra Hall, also of the Sydney Morning Herald, wrote "Jacobson is so intent on its efforts to firm up Swampy's credentials as an impractical but inspired eccentric that he's in danger of turning him into a gormless irritant." Damien Straker of Impulse Gamer called the film "a confused political critique disguised as a mediocre Australian family film."

As of 27 October 2015 the film has grossed $10.1 million at the Australian box office.[2]

Accolades

Damian Wyvill was nominated for Best Cinematography at the 5th AACTA Awards, but lost against John Seale for Mad Max: Fury Road. The film was also nominated for the AACTA People's Choice Award for Favourite Australian Film, but lost against The Dressmaker.

Home media

The film was released on DVD, Blu-ray and video on demand platforms in Australia on 16 December 2015.

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, February 03, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.