DAMAGE (2023)


Trauma, old age and a taxi.

This could be the tagline for this interesting, intimate piece about belonging and our place in the world. Whether you are in a country ‘illegally’ or living in your own country as an elderly person whom society sees as an inconvenience. Neither feel wanted.

Ali is an undocumented man who is using another man’s taxi license to earn a little money to survive and Esther is an old woman who doesn’t know where she is going and doesn’t recognise the world anymore. The film takes place on a taxi journey where they both learn about each other in a world that is filled with surveillance cameras, constantly watching and judging.

Ali Al Jenabi as Ali in Damage

Ali Al Jenabi as Ali

This low-budget film is directed by Madeleine Blackwell. Her background is in acting having studied at Australia’s National Institute of Drama (NIDA) and acted professionally before moving on to directing and being involved in community work. It’s clear watching this film that she cares and wants to use her creativity to make a change or at least shine a light on problematic subjects. This is ultimately a human story about two people from very different places and seeks to find the commonality between us all.
After all, we are all together and apart at all times.
A part of the whole.

Ali is played by Ali Al Jenabi, who in real life is an asylum seeker who fled Iraq 20 years ago at the height of the war and is the subject of an award-winning book called The People Smuggler ‘The True Story of Ali Al Jenabi, the Oskar Schindler of Asia’ by Robin de Crespigny’.
Here, he brings warmth, charisma and compassion to the character of Ali, who is frustrated where he has ended up but never gives up hope for a better world.

Imelda Bourke as Esther in Damage

Imelda Bourke as Esther

Esther is played by Imelda Bourke, who IRL is the mother of the director and is a singer who has performed on radio, television and stage for over 50 years and this is her first feature film role.
Blackwell wanted to use non-actors to bring an element of realism and non-performance to the film. This works at times and not so much at others but is worthy of a hat-tip.

Although there was a script for the film, Madeleine wanted to keep it loose and use it as a blueprint for the two actors to improvise and find moments together and there are some lovely moments in the short running time of 81 minutes.

Imelda Bourke and Ali Al Jenabi in Damage

Imelda Bourke and Ali Al Jenabi

The music by Peter Knight, Mohammad Ameen Marrdan, Kate Reid, Jerry Wesley-Smith and Jem Savage sits well with the images on screen and acts as a fitting companion to the film.

We are shown surveillance cameras and the footage they see, some of which came from WikiLeaks including audio of American soldiers murdering Iraqi citizens and there is a thank you during the credits to Wikileaks and Julian Assange. There is some great drone cinematography by Mark Blackwell of the unnamed city that the film takes place in and intercut throughout the film and uses many overhead shots denoting perspective and has a dehumanising quality that renders people as ants. There are also shots of an unnamed, destroyed city which adds tension to the tale, as does the editing by Raphael Rivera which has dynamism, rhythm and urgency.

Big brother is watching YOU

Big brother is watching YOU

Director, Madeleine Blackwell has said about the making of the film:
“Witnessing cruelty and dehumanisation becoming normalised in the world around me compelled me to write a screenplay that would redeem the sense of hope, understanding and resistance….Damage cannot be undone; the invasion of Iraq cannot be undone. The film is about memory and how fragile it is. Damage is permanent so when we lie about the need to go to war, when we condone the militarisation of the entire world we are setting fire to the future.”

In cinemas November 9th in Australia.

81 mins.

BRAND BOLLYWOOD DOWN UNDER (2023)


This informative documentary charts the story of the relationship between the Bombay Film Industry (Bollywood) and Australia. Directed by filmmaker Anupham Sharma (UnIndian, Run), the film opens with many Indian Industry creatives commenting on the term ‘Bollywood’ and their feelings about it.
Actor, Anumpan Kher says: 
“Nobody calls it Polishwood, nobody calls it Frenchwood. I hate it.
It’s a borrowed term and we are idiots to have accepted it.”

He has a point.

It is a term that was seemingly conceived in the 1960s/70s that differentiated popular films that were made in Bombay from art-house Indian films (Satyajit Ray) and films made around the rest of India, of which there are many. It’s a term that stuck and is a catch-all term for any films that come out of India and have songs in them.

Anupam Kher in Brand Bollywood Down Under

Anupam Kher in Brand Bollywood Down Under

I have a love/hate relationship with Bollywood and its style. I am half-Indian and unfortunately don’t speak Hindi.
My father introduced me to the music of the Bollywood films of his childhood and the cinema he loved very much. Like many Indians, he loved the music. It is a way to escape, to become something different and experience life through the lens of cinematic entertainment.

In the late 1970s I was 9 years old when my Father showed me Satyam Shivam Sundaram, I enjoyed the music but it was no Superman the Movie or Star Wars. As a child growing up in England in the 1970s and 80s, my appetite for American cinema was growing and my leanings were way more West than East at the time. I was then shown Qurbani in 1980 starring Feroz Khan. I then saw Kranti (1981) and Amar Akbar Anthony (1977) and when I watched these films, my Father would translate them for me and my brothers as we watched them on the VHS copies we had without subtitles. 
Because of this experience with my Father, these few films will remain with me as deep bonding moments with him.


Feroz Khan went on to make Prem Aggan starring his son, Fardeen Khan in 1998, which was one of the first Bollywood films to be partly filmed in Australia (around the Sydney Opera House, the Twelve Apostles and other iconic landmarks) and helped cement the relationship between the Bombay and Australian film industries.


Indians lapped it up. It allowed them to travel to places most of them couldn’t afford to ever go to and escape down under. There are now approximately 3/4 million Indian residents in Australia with almost a quarter of a million living in Sydney and its surrounding areas. It makes sense that there should be some ongoing collaboration between the Indian and Australian film industries. Popular Indian cinema has remained a well-loved form of cinema for millions of Indians and cinema-goers around the world for years and for good reason. Pure escapism from the difficulties of life. They are big, spectacular, garish, over the top, fun and mostly joyous.

This documentary takes us through the inception of Bollywood from the first film Raja Harishchandra (1913) through to its worldwide popularity today. It also bravely touches on the attacks on Indian students by white Australians in the 2000s through to the controversies regarding Indian filmmakers not being given subsidiaries to film in Australia both incidents having a negative impact on the filming of Indian films in Australia for a time.

Anupam Sharma directing a music video

Anupam Sharma directing a music video

This interesting documentary sheds light on part of the relationship between India and Australia through the lens of popular Indian entertainment. The film slightly loses its way in the last quarter becoming a touch muddy and unclear and the director shamelessly finishes his film with a music video (in full) that he directed but apart from these small criticisms the film was entertaining and enlightening.

89 Mins

Out at cinemas in Australia on November 2nd 2023