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DramaThrillerComedyCrime

Judy & Punch

- A twisted tale of love, revenge and puppetry

In the anarchic town of Seaside, nowhere near the sea, puppeteers Judy and Punch are trying to resurrect their marionette show. The show is a hit due to Judy's superior puppeteering but Punch's driving ambition and penchant for whisky lead to an inevitable tragedy that Judy must avenge.

Release Date : 2019-11-21

Language :English

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Blue-Tongue FilmsFilm VictoriaVICE MediaCreate NSWSoundfirmPariah ProductionsScreen Australia

Production Country : Australia

Alternative Titles :

Cast

Mia Wasikowska

Character Name : Judy

Original Name : Mia Wasikowska

Gender : Female

Damon Herriman

Character Name : Punch

Original Name : Damon Herriman

Gender : Male

Benedict Hardie

Character Name : Derrick Fairweather

Original Name : Benedict Hardie

Gender : Male

Terry Norris

Character Name : Scaramouche

Original Name : Terry Norris

Gender : Male

Don Bridges

Character Name : The Preacher

Original Name : Don Bridges

Gender : Male

Tom Budge

Character Name : Mr. Frankly

Original Name : Tom Budge

Gender : Male

Eddie Baroo

Character Name : Nordic Man

Original Name : Eddie Baroo

Gender : Male

Michael M. Foster

Character Name : Pimp

Original Name : Michael M. Foster

Gender : Male

Virginia Gay

Character Name : Ma

Original Name : Virginia Gay

Gender : Female

Gillian Jones

Character Name : Dr. Goodtime

Original Name : Gillian Jones

Gender : Female

Lucy Honigman

Character Name : Polly

Original Name : Lucy Honigman

Gender : Female

Brenda Palmer

Character Name : Maid Maude

Original Name : Brenda Palmer

Gender : Male

Phillip McInnes

Character Name : Rodney Goodbuckle

Original Name : Phillip McInnes

Gender : Male

Xavier Gouault

Character Name : About Townsman

Original Name : Xavier Gouault

Gender : Male

Kiruna Stamell

Character Name : Mavis

Original Name : Kiruna Stamell

Gender : Female

Alice Ansara

Character Name : Alice

Original Name : Alice Ansara

Gender : Female

Daisy Axon

Character Name : Scotty

Original Name : Daisy Axon

Gender : Female

Amy Christian

Character Name : Aileen the Heretic

Original Name : Amy Christian

Gender : Female

Jacek Koman

Character Name : Singer

Original Name : Jacek Koman

Gender : Male

David Bowe

Character Name : Heretic

Original Name : David Bowe

Gender : Male

Kerri Gannan

Character Name : Potato Seller / Townswoman

Original Name : Kerri Gannan

Gender : Male

Michael Papas

Character Name : Hobo Basher

Original Name : Michael Papas

Gender : Male

Charlie Nettleton

Character Name : Pancake

Original Name : Charlie Nettleton

Gender : Male

Logan Nettleton

Character Name : Flea

Original Name : Logan Nettleton

Gender : Male

Makenzie Erikson

Character Name : Gallows Crowd

Original Name : Makenzie Erikson

Gender : Male

Lachlan Martin

Character Name : Scoot

Original Name : Lachlan Martin

Gender : Male

Lotte St. Clair

Character Name : Corkey

Original Name : Lotte St. Clair

Gender : Male

Sue Hill

Character Name : Bald Whore

Original Name : Sue Hill

Gender : Female

Zane Slater

Character Name : Town Urchin

Original Name : Zane Slater

Gender : Male

Catarina Mil Homens

Character Name : Ede

Original Name : Catarina Mil Homens

Gender : Male

Joshua Gerosa

Character Name : Hobo Basher

Original Name : Joshua Gerosa

Gender : Male

Tina Currah

Character Name : Whore

Original Name : Tina Currah

Gender : Male

Eleanor Howlett

Character Name : Whore

Original Name : Eleanor Howlett

Gender : Male

Scarlett Dixon

Character Name : Baby

Original Name : Scarlett Dixon

Gender : Male

Summer Dixon

Character Name : Baby

Original Name : Summer Dixon

Gender : Male

Trinny

Character Name : Toby the Dog

Original Name : Trinny

Gender : Male

Hayden Spencer

Character Name : Heckling Man

Original Name : Hayden Spencer

Gender : Male

Reviews

S

SWITCH.

@maketheSWITCH

2021-06-23

It’s always fantastic when an Australian film is a success, and even more so when there’s a female filmmaker at the helm. However, for something as unique and fresh as ‘Judy and Punch’ to come from Australia makes me genuinely proud. A period story with a message that’s vital to current society, Mirrah Foulkes is an exciting young storyteller, and I can’t wait to see what she has in store next. - Charlie David Page Read Charlie's full article... https://www.maketheswitch.com.au/article/review-judy-and-punch-a-dark-fairytale-from-a-fresh-australian-voice Head to https://www.maketheswitch.com.au/sff for more Sydney Film Festival reviews.

S

Stephen Campbell

@Bertaut

2021-06-23

**_A fascinating socio-political study of proto-feminism mixed with exceptionally dark comedy_** >_Thence to see an Italian puppet play that is within the rayles there, which is very pretty, the best that ever I saw._ - Samuel Pepys (May 9, 1662); _The Diary of Samuel Pepys_ (1825) >_In my opinion the street Punch is one of those extravagant reliefs from the realities of life which would lose its hold upon the people if it were made moral and instructive. I regard it as quite harmless in its influence, and as an outrageous joke which no one in existence would think of regarding as an_ _incentive to any kind of action or as a model for any kind of conduct._ - Charles Dickens; Letter to Mary Tyler (November 7, 1849) The debut feature from Australian actress turned writer/director Mirrah Foulkes, working from an idea by English actress Lucy Punch (which, given the subject matter, seems like it's a joke, but isn't) and her brother Tom, _Judy & Punch_ is a (very) dark comedy that presents the fictional background behind the early years of the (in)famous puppet show. Essentially a study in proto-feminism, a look at #MeToo sensibilities applied to a very un-#MeToo society, it's a strange mixture of _Monty Python_-esque slapstick and serious social critique, taking in misogyny, domestic violence, witchcraft, social stratification, and the exploitation of old age, and wrapping it all up in a gleefully anachronistic and pseudo-magical realist aesthetic, not entirely dissimilar to what you might find in the work of Angela Carter. It's a curious mix that really shouldn't work, and, for many, it probably won't. I can see some finding the tonal balance too skewered towards socio-political protest for it to work as a comedy, whereas others will argue that the comic elements undermine the seriousness of the socio-political agenda. For me, although the film is a beat too long at 105 minutes, I thought Foulkes just about got away with the tonal balancing act – most of the humour lands and most of the political material is well-handled. She's also helped immeasurably by strong performances across the board and a stunning visual design, which is especially accomplished given that this is her first feature. In the town of Seaside (which, the opening legend informs us, is nowhere near the sea) in the English countryside, Judy (Mia Wasikowska) and Punch (Damon Herriman) are a young couple with an infant child. A Seaside-native, Judy ran away with Punch some years ago, with the duo going on to create the _Punch & Judy_ puppet show. Judy is by far the more talented puppeteer, but Punch is a natural showman and a master of self-promotion, and is often called the "_greatest puppeteer of his generation_", despite not even being the greatest puppeteer of his marriage. However, his inability to control his drinking led to the show's reputation waning, and the two have now returned to Seaside. Although Judy is happy just getting on with life, when Punch hears that a talent-scout is in the area, he determines to curb his drinking and put on the best show he possibly can. Meanwhile, women guilty of such things as having a rash, looking at the moon for too long, and being the neighbour of a man whose chickens died, are being accused of witchcraft at such a rate that Seaside has a monthly "stoning day", to the apparent horror of no one except Judy and the town's meek new constable, Derrick (Benedict Hardie), who's in love with Judy (from afar). However, when Punch responds to a horrifying accident by viciously beating Judy, she embarks upon a mission of vengeance, joined by a band of women and children who have fled the town to avoid persecution. You know from the get-go that a movie with the title _Judy & Punch_ isn't going to be thematically subtle, and so it goes with Foulkes's film. Apart from Derrick and Scaramouche (Terry Norris), the senile husband of Maude (Brenda Palmer), Judy and Punch's elderly maid, literally every man in the film is a violent misogynistic thug. I don't bring this up by way of criticism, merely to illustrate that the film wears its themes, very proudly, on its sleeve. The _Punch & Judy_ show itself, which invariably involves Punch beating the piss out of Judy with a stick (itself not exactly a subtle phallic stand-in), has never been especially coy about its own thematic tropes, so why should a film inverting those tropes be otherwise? And, boy, does Foulkes invert them – we get Punch failing spectacularly (and hilariously) to look after their baby, we get sausage-related comedy, we get a troublesome dog, we get a police constable, we get an executioner, we even get a crocodile, but we get everything in service of a feminist rethread of the original's misogyny. Indeed, the more familiar you are with the show and its history, including its _commedia dell'arte_ origins, the more fun you'll have with the film. Without giving too much away, _Judy & Punch_ is, at least in part, another entry in a subgenre we're seeing more and more of in recent years – gynocentric revenge films directed by women; Coralie Fargeat's spectacular _Revenge_ (2017) and Jennifer Kent's haunting _The Nightingale_ (2018) both spring to mind, but you could also include something like Isabella Eklöf's disturbing _Holiday_ (2018), which is a rape/revenge drama without the revenge. At one point, someone watching the show asks, "_does Punch always win?_", and it's precisely this kind of societal assumption which Foulkes addresses – convention at the time may have been that, yes, Punch must always win, but Foulkes suggests life is far more complicated and far less predictable. One of _Judy & Punch_'s most obvious strengths is the aesthetic, with its lush and vibrant _milieu_ – a realm that's not quite fantasy, not quite historical reality. The town of Seaside, for all its vivid Renaissance-era squalor, is that of a fairy-tale allegory – the kind you'd expect to see terrorised by a werewolf or a giant. Production designer Josephine Ford (_Animal Kingdom_; _The Rover_; _Cargo_) has a field-day, having seemingly been turned loose to indulge herself. One half-expects to see a gingerbread house in the background. What's especially interesting, however, is that cinematographer Stefan Duscio (_The Turning_; _Jungle_; _Upgrade_) shoots the whole thing completely realistically, setting up a fascinating aesthetic juxtaposition which adds to the magical realism immensely. Enhancing the surreality even more is the electronic score by François Tétaz (_Wolf Creek_; _Rogue_; _The Portal_), which has no place in a film of this time-period (aside from Tétaz's score, the soundtrack also features a rocking electronic adaptation of Johann Sebastian Bach's "Air on a G String" and even Leonard Cohen's "Who by Fire"). Despite how out of place this should be, it works wonderfully with the stylistic trappings of Foulkes's weird anachronistic vibe. Equally important here is the dialogue, which is a mixture of period-correct diction and a more modern inflection (one character even quotes one of the best-known speeches from Ridley Scott's _Gladiator_ (2000), earning the biggest laugh at the screening I attended). Put it this way – at one point, we see a group of characters in Renaissance costumes doing tai chi. If that sounds like something you'd find funny, you'll love this exceptionally-realised world. I'd be remiss here if I didn't briefly mention the acting, which is universally terrific. All the supporting players do fine jobs – Norris's Scaramouche is all politeness and confusion, whilst Palmer's Maude is all loyalty and kindness. But what comes across most is their deep love – they're the kind of elderly couple that still hold hands on a walk even though they've been married for decades. Really sweet stuff. Hardie is equally good as the one good man in a town of troublemakers. But unlike the characters played by Clint Eastwood, Derrick has zero authority and no respect. However, despite his ineffectual nature, Hardie plays him as a completely straight-shooter, true, and honest, and it's a testament to his portrayal that Derrick is more than just the punchline of a few gags. He has real interiority. Obviously, Wasikowska has the meatiest role, and her performance is similar to some of her previous work, but nevertheless, her Judy isn't just a vehicle for feminist rhetoric, she's a capable and fierce woman in her own right. For me, however, Herriman steals the show. Initially, he makes Punch seem contemptible, yet somehow, as the film goes on, he makes the character even less likeable. His work in the penultimate scene is especially strong, where he has to play the part so as to communicate one thing to the other characters and something else entirely to the audience. Superb stuff. The film does, however, have some problems. As mentioned, for some it will be too funny to work as feminist critique, and for others, too serious to work as comedy. Others still might argue it works as neither because it never fully commits to either. Without a doubt, Foulkes walks a very fine line trying to maintain such a delicate balance. I think she pulls it off, but others won't, that's just the nature of tonally ambiguous films such as this. The narrative and dialogue are also extraordinarily on the nose on occasion. As I said above, I didn't mind this, but some people will have a problem with how direct are lines such as, "_what is a witch but a person who exists outside your blinkered view of society?_" A few of the themes are also under-explored, including domestic violence, which seems to have been included as a plot point simply because it's an issue in the original show – Foulkes never really takes it anywhere. Nevertheless, I enjoyed _Judy & Punch_. A statement on oppression and female (re)assertion, it takes the best-known elements of a world-famous puppet show, and inverts them, turning an inherently misogynistic story into a celebration of early feminism. Allegorical in both visual and narrative design, it may be pantomime-esque, but so too is it compelling enough to turn what could have been dismissed as a nasty fairy-tale into a piece of work which is thematically relevant to the _milieu_ in which we now reside.

L

Louisa Moore - Screen Zealots

@screenzealots

2021-06-23

The dark, absurd period fairy tale “Judy & Punch” makes an accurate observation (and a bold statement) about sex and violence in pop culture, and the mob mentality that can rapidly turn fear into savagery. This strange tale of puppetry, spousal abuse, murder, witchcraft, and revenge is based on the traditional 16th century Punch and Judy puppet show. It’s well told with a funny, sad, and modern feminist spin on the tale from writer / director Mirrah Foulkes. Things are rough in Seaside, where villagers fill their evenings by attending the marionette theater run by Punch (Damon Herriman), the self-proclaimed “greatest puppeteer,” and his wife Judy (Mia Wasikowska), who holds the real talent in the family. The show is crude and the routine misogynistic without much artistry, as a male puppet beats other puppets, including female ones, with a fist, a stick, or any toy object at hand. As the audience roars their approval, the violence on stage grows meaner and more frequent — and eventually spills into the couple’s real-life home. Punch, a verbally and physically abusive drunk, dismisses his wife’s flair for the theater and instead screams at her to give the audience what they want: “the punchy and the smashy.” It’s a vicious circle of life imitating art, and vice versa. The film is well-suited as a modern day criticism on superstition (here, the villages routinely hang and stone citizens suspected of witchcraft), the brutality that can lie dormant in the heart of many, the callousness seems to have taken over routine kindness, and the often dangerous power of the court of public opinion. The dark humor is a sophisticated wrapper for a story that, when the layers are peeled back, is sad and disquieting in so many ways. It’s also a fiercely feminist revenge story that’s deliciously provocative, thanks to a fantastic lead performance from Wasikowska (you can always count on her to make interesting choices when it comes to big screen roles). There are a few too many long stretches of filler that feel pointless and slow down the story, but overall this narrative of male aggression and female empowerment is a classic, intelligent story that provides a perfectly cynical commentary for current times.