logo
David Stratton's scathing review of iconic film The Castle goes viral following film critic's death

David Stratton's scathing review of iconic film The Castle goes viral following film critic's death

Daily Mail​2 days ago
It's the low-budget Aussie movie comedy that's now considered a classic by fans.
But when The Castle was released, 28 years ago, film critic David Stratton, who passed away on Thursday aged 85, confessed that he did not get the joke.
And now his notorious review of the film, from the now legendary Work Dog team, has gone viral after being re-posted to X following his passing.
Originally broadcast as part of The Movie Show on SBS in 1997, Stratton's review was scathing, calling the film, 'silly' and 'roughly' made.
'Well I'm afraid it wasn't for me,' he told his longtime co-host Margaret Pomeranz, who loved the film.
'I really didn't get onto the wavelength of this film at all,' Stratton continued, adding he thought the filmmakers had 'patronised' its working-class characters.
'I didn't find it funny,' he said, and gave the film one and a half stars out of four, while Pomeranz gave it four stars out of four.
Still, Stratton lived to regret his verdict.
Like many professional critics, serious about their role, the English-born cinephile was in the habit of revisiting films with fresh eyes.
The 85-year-old told The Sydney Morning Herald, last year, he 'completely misunderstood' the film.
'It was the first film made by a team that worked in television, and it looked to me like a telemovie, whereas I'm very much into the visual side of cinema,' he explained.
David admitted he had since watched the film several times and finds it very entertaining.
'But I obviously completely misunderstood it, as I have watched it a few times since, and I now think it's very funny,' he continued.
Fans of Stratton were quick to comment on the X share.
'We'll miss you Dave,' said one user, while another added, 'A true giant of the Australian film industry, vale.'
'Sad about that. He was a legend,' added another.
One follower commented: 'Not just a marvellous critic. A really wonderful man.'
The Castle, which first hit screens Down Under in April 1997, is a comedy about a blue-collar family battling developers.
Anne Tenney, Stephen Curry, Sophie Lee, Eric Bana and Charles 'Bud' Tingwell, starred alongside Michael Caton in the ultra-low budget film.
The film's creators, Rob Sitch, Santo Cilauro, Tom Gleisner, and Jane Kennedy, who were famed for the tabloid TV satire Frontline (1994-1997), later made another comedy classic, The Dish, in 2000.
Despite its extremely low budget of just $750,000, The Castle was a financial success, grossing $10.3 million at the box office in Australia.
The film spawned a truckload of catchphrases.
Dialogue lines like 'Tell them they're dreamin', 'That's going straight to the pool room' and 'how's the serenity' were endlessly quoted by fans and adopted by commentators in the three decades since the movie's release.
Caton became a popular star in Australia after playing the lead role in The Castle - a Melbourne family man who fights to keep his home from being acquired by the government in its plans to expand a nearby airport.
Since then, Caton has appeared in a slew of top-tier Australian dramas including Packed to the Rafters, Strange Bedfellows, The Animal and All Saints.
He also starred alongside Sam Neill in Rams last year, and in the Packed to the Rafters reboot, Back to the Rafters.
It comes after Stratton's family announced his passing on Thursday.
He died peacefully, aged 85, in a hospital near his Blue Mountains home west of Sydney.
Stratton's career as a film critic, writer, and educator in Australia spanned more than half a century until his retirement in December 2023, following a series of health problems.
He was best known for appearing on television screens alongside co-host Margaret Pomeranz for almost three decades on various movie review shows.
'David's passion for film, commitment to Australian cinema, and generous spirit touched countless lives,' his family said.
'He was adored as a husband, father, grandfather, great-grandfather, and admired friend.
'David's family would like to express their heartfelt gratitude for the overwhelming support from friends, colleagues, and the public recently and across his lifetime.'
They also had a special request for film buffs.
'[We] invite everyone to celebrate David's remarkable life and legacy by watching their favourite movie, or David's favourite movie of all time — Singin' In the Rain,' the family added.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Sam Nicoresti: Baby Doomer review – an ebullient hour with a sky-high joke count
Sam Nicoresti: Baby Doomer review – an ebullient hour with a sky-high joke count

The Guardian

time6 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Sam Nicoresti: Baby Doomer review – an ebullient hour with a sky-high joke count

'Sir, are you aware those are women's clothes?' Even the most basic interactions can be fraught when you're transgender, and Sam Nicoresti builds their show around one such happening. Misgendered by a shop assistant, we find Sam in a department store changing room, squeezing into a dress from which they're then unable to extricate themselves. How to escape this with some shred of dignity intact? It's a big-hitting and farcical standup sketch, delivered with such self-deprecating joyfulness by Nicoresti that you almost forget the sensitivity of its subject matter. That's of a piece with the rest of Baby Doomer, a set that addresses with grace and buoyant humour our host's wrestle with their gender and mental health. No tub-thumping here, just a high-joke-count hour from an act still learning how to be a woman (and quick to caricature how imperfectly they're doing so) but cocky about their credentials as trans. It's a step forward, and towards a more mainstream brand of standup, too, after Cancel Anti Wokeflake Snow Culture, the quirky multimedia offering that established Nicoresti three years ago. The show takes that pressure-cooker changing room experience as a prompt to explore Nicoresti's life in a Britain not always accommodating to a natal male walking down the street in a skirt suit. To whom might they look for a role model? Nicoresti proposes Sméagol/Gollum, greatly to the amusement of fellow nerds in the front row. Are they aunt Sam to their nephew, or uncle Sam? Should marriage be preferred to a polycule, or would it merely endorse the cis-normative status quo? As if to emphasise Nicoresti's repositioning as a standup who wouldn't look out of place on Live at the Apollo, there's a home-banker routine about having sperm frozen (mirroring Tim Key's and Ian Smith's set pieces elsewhere in town), and another about receiving a walking tour-style induction at the local gym – 'as if I'm the king', says Nicoresti, in a choice image. It's quite the trick Nicoresti pulls off here, never soft-soaping the challenges of life as a trans woman while making of it an ebullient hour of comedy. At Pleasance Courtyard, Edinburgh, until 24 August All our Edinburgh festival reviews

Australia's most notorious vegan activist begs fans for $30,000 to leave the country
Australia's most notorious vegan activist begs fans for $30,000 to leave the country

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Australia's most notorious vegan activist begs fans for $30,000 to leave the country

A notorious vegan activist has asked her followers to help her raise $30,000 so she can pay a travel bond and attend an animal rights 'camp out' abroad. Tash Peterson, 31, surrendered her passport and declared bankruptcy in May this year after losing a defamation suit. Western Australian Supreme Court Chief Justice Peter Quinlan found in 2024 that she and her boyfriend, Jack Higgs, had published defamatory claims about a vet 'eating her own patients'. Peterson and Higgs were ordered to pay $280,000 in damages. But the young activist wants to travel to the United Kingdom and deliver a speech at the Vegan Camp Out Festival in Hertfordshire over the final weekend of August. She and Higgs will have to pay a $30,000 bond for their bankruptcy trustees to retrieve their passports. 'We are bankrupt and need $30,000 to get to the UK for the Vegan Camp Out,' she said in a video shared with her followers on social media. Higgs claimed the pair were 'forced into bankruptcy' by the defamation case. 'Our bankruptcy trustees said that we have to pay $30,000 if we want to go to the UK, because they're concerned we're going to flee Australia for good,' Peterson said. 'Because of this we're trying to raise funds so that I can give my speech... the only purpose of our trip is so that I can speak up for non-human animals not to run away.' Higgs said the bond, once returned after the trip, would go to funding the Farm Transparency Project, which produced the vegan cult film Dominion. Peterson's mother, Sally, is hosting the pair's GoFundMe page online, which has so far raised $3,200. In April this year, WA vet Kay McIntosh's lawyer, Martin Bennett, said neither Peterson nor Higgs had 'attempted to pay a cent' of the defamation damages. The Daily Mail has contacted Peterson for comment. Peterson has carried out controversial protests on several occasions including 'gatecrashing' restaurants and agricultural events. In March, she burst into The Lamb Shop at Broadbeach on the Gold Coast playing the 'screams of terrified animals' from a speaker attached to her belt. 'Do the screams make you feel guilty?' she asked customers before she was confronted by a worker. She has also covered her body in fake blood on numerous occasions and paraded through public locations while carrying pro-veganism signs. Last year, the semi-clad activist protested in a bloodied stunt outside David Jones on Hay Street in Perth's CBD. She highlighted the message by lying on top of a 'blood-soaked chopping block' which read: 'David Jones: Drop Wild-Animal Skins'. Peterson launched an OnlyFans page in 2022 to fund her career-activist ambitions, publishing a lengthy video explaining the move at the time. 'I get accused of being an attention seeker, I get accused of sexualising myself, I get accused of just doing my animal rights activism to promote my OnlyFans account,' she said. 'Obviously in our society today we think women are treated equally however there is so much ingrained misogyny amongst men and women today because a lot of people are saying women shouldn't be wearing lingerie, they shouldn't be going on OnlyFans and getting paid to be topless or naked. 'I completely dispute this because I think women should be able to do whatever the hell they want to with their bodies.' Her OnlyFans revenue was scrutinised in court in April, following the bankruptcy declaration. The justice rejected the pursuant's attempts to conflate Peterson's activism and her trust company, V-Gan Booty PTY LTD, which owns her subscription operations. He said Peterson's OnlyFans revenue was likely boosted by her notoriety as an activist, but said not all of her actions were 'in her capacity as a director or agent of the company', according to the West Australian. The company raked in $250,952 in taxable income for the financial year 2021-22, of which $132,948 came from online subscription sales.

Celebrity SAS star reveals the show's ‘greatest ever escape' went unaired and left Ant Middleton fuming
Celebrity SAS star reveals the show's ‘greatest ever escape' went unaired and left Ant Middleton fuming

Scottish Sun

time3 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Celebrity SAS star reveals the show's ‘greatest ever escape' went unaired and left Ant Middleton fuming

Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A CELEBRITY SAS: Who Dares Wins star has revealed the show's "greatest ever escape" which went unaired and left Ant Middleton fuming. The Channel 4 show is not for the fainthearted and sees 14 famous faces trying to keep up with almost impossible tasks. Sign up for the Entertainment newsletter Sign up 5 Ant Middleton was left fuming after a star performed an 'escape stunt' on Celebrity SAS Credit: Seven 5 Rugby ace Sam Burgess took part in the Aussie version of the show, which sees Ant back in charge Credit: Seven 5 The sportsman said he performed the 'best escape they had ever seen on the show' but how it was never aired Credit: Seven Celebrity SAS sees former Special Forces members put the celebrity contestants through their paces in an intense training camp. Ant, who was axed from the UK's SAS: Who Dares Wins in 2021, was well known for his tough persona on the show. Now a former celebrity contestant has spilled the beans on an unaired scene that infuriated Ant so much he inflicted a harsh punishment on him. Rugby ace Sam Burgess took part in the Australian version of Celebrity SAS: Who Dares Wins two years ago, which Ant joined after he was axed from the UK show. The sportsman revealed that he was told he performed the "best escape they had ever seen on the show", but how it was never aired Spilling the beans, Sam told The Overlap and Betfair's Stick to Cricket show: 'When I did Celebrity SAS, it was a 15-day course. 20 start and only a few finish it. "By day 12, you're sleep deprived, food deprived, freezing. They'd taught us: if you're captured, try to escape - transport is your best chance. 'We get ambushed, hooded, zip-tied, thrown in stress positions. After two hours, we're loaded into a minibus. "I pop my restraints, peek under the hood and I see one driver, one cameraman, one soldier, no guns. I think I can take these guys." Celebrity SAS star axed after 'lying and cheating' on show - as another quits Continuing, he said: 'I waited for my moment, ripped the soldier's comms off, threw his phone out, choked the driver, 'Pull the f***ing van over now.' He's silent, so I start tugging the wheel. "Told another contestant to pull the handbrake and take the keys. We screech to a stop, throw them out, and I drive off with the others. 'We're free - driving around for 40 minutes - I even thought about going to KFC. Eventually I spot a pub, pull in. Fifteen minutes later, we are surrounded by cars." He the said that Ant wan't happy about his actions, and bestowed a harsh punishment on him. 5 Sam spilled the beans on what really happened when he took part in Celeb SAS Credit: PA "Ant Middleton gets on the bus, they absolutely flog us for 12 hours - tied up, thrown in shipping containers," Sam revealed. "Two contestants quit. None of it ever aired, but they told me it was the best escape they'd had.' Ant spent years fighting for his country during his military career in the Marines and the Paras. He was chief instructor on SAS: Who Dares Wins before he was sacked after a series of blunders. One included a tweet about the Black Lives Matter movement. There was a social media backlash in June 2020 after Ant posted a video of violence at anti-racism protests in London. He tweeted: 'The extreme left against the extreme right. "BLM and EDL are not welcome on our streets, absolute scum. 5 Ant is now at the helm of the Aussie Celeb SAS Credit: Seven "What a great example you are to your future generation. Bravo." The same month, Channel 4 set out a "new and clear commitment" to being an anti-racist organisation and said Ant's tweet 'in no way represent the views of Channel 4'. Discussing what happened for him to lose his job, he told The James Smith podcast: 'Witch hunt? I never thought that existed until the latest shenanigans with SAS UK. 'Ultimately people can see through it and know I was pushed before I could jump.' Speaking about the BLM tweet, Ant also defended himself at the time, telling The Sun: 'If you have half a brain cell you will realise what I was talking about. 'It was the protesters fighting and violence and rioting in broad daylight. Everything I fought for abroad to stop happening on our shores.' Meanwhile, the latest series of the UK's Celebrity SAS has been full of drama. In the first episode, two stars quit, before Love Islanders Chloe Burrows and Tasha Ghouri followed suit in the second instalment. While none of the celebrities handed in their armbands in the latest episode there was still a double exit. The Traitors star Harry Clark was given his marching orders by the furious staff. It came after they noticed he was cutting corners and not pulling his weight. His actions seemed to contribute to former footballer's Adebayo 'The Beast' Akinfenwa's decision to quit, after he shouldered much of the weight of the dinghy Harry's team was trying to transport in a race. With his bad knee flaring up, Adebayo ran out of steam due to the pain and was forced to withdraw when he couldn't continue.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store