Química Internacional para el Curtido S.L.

Wake In Fright | (1971)

: Ultimately, the film suggests the barbarism John encounters was already latent within him, waiting for the right conditions to emerge [5, 6]. 🌟 Legacy & Restoration

The film is celebrated for its unblinking look at the darker side of the Australian psyche:

: A single night of heavy drinking leads John into a high-stakes "two-up" gambling game, where he loses all his money [16, 17]. Wake in Fright (1971)

The story follows John Grant, a middle-class schoolteacher working off a government bond in the desolate town of Tiboonda [1, 23]. While traveling to Sydney for Christmas, he gets stranded in the mining town of Bundanyabba—locally known as "" [8, 14, 16].

: He is egged on by local "Doc" Tydon (played by Donald Pleasence) into a series of increasingly debasing rituals, including a famously graphic kangaroo hunt [6, 12, 25]. 🔥 Key Themes : Ultimately, the film suggests the barbarism John

: Penniless and unable to leave, John is absorbed into the town's hyper-masculine, aggressive culture of mateship and mandatory hospitality [15, 17].

: It is one of the few films to have screened twice in competition at Cannes —once upon its release and once after its 2009 restoration [30, 33]. While traveling to Sydney for Christmas, he gets

: The "Yabba" men express friendship through aggressive drinking and violence, viewing any refusal as an insult [6, 17].