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Drift

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Australia · 2013
Rated R · 1h 53m
Director Morgan O'Neill, Ben Nott
Starring Sam Worthington, Myles Pollard, Xavier Samuel, Lesley-Ann Brandt
Genre Drama

In the 70s two brothers battle killer waves, conservative society and ruthless bikers to kick-start the modern surf industry.

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What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

42

The A.V. Club by Ignatiy Vishnevetsky

The mediocre ones, like the new Australian drama Drift, squeeze surfing scenes into conventional narratives, presuming that, because surfing looks exciting, any story related to surfing is inherently interesting.

40

The New York Times by Jeannette Catsoulis

This poor-surfers-make-good drama from Morgan O’Neill and Ben Nott relies more than it should on toned thighs and taut gluteals. Be grateful; there’s nothing to see on dry land that’s anywhere near as compelling.

50

New York Post by Lou Lumenick

I’m a sucker for films with great surfing footage, let alone wacky ’70s hairstyles. But this overlong, cliché-infested Aussie period drama tested my patience.

40

Los Angeles Times by Robert Abele

When Drift sticks to the likable, gently humorous contours of occasionally fractious brotherly love, broken up by thrillingly shot surfing footage, it has plenty of charm, period flavor and breezy visual breadth... Where the movie routinely disappoints, though, is in pursuit of a perfect storm of conflict story lines.

63

McClatchy-Tribune News Service by Roger Moore

Drift is utterly conventional in so many ways. But the relatively unknown cast, the rough hewn setting and startling cinematography — footage that rivals many a surf documentary’s best shots — give it a boost.

40

Variety by Scott Foundas

Manages to get a fair bit right about early 1970s surf culture when it isn’t trafficking in the hoariest of David-vs.-Goliath cliches.

12

Slant Magazine by Tomas Hachard

The obstacles that the Kelly brothers encounter are as uninspired as the film's treacly lessons about brotherhood and staying true to one's principles.

50

San Francisco Chronicle by Walter Addiego

The direction, by Ben Nott and Morgan O'Neill, is average, except for the surfing sequences, which are easily as striking as what we see in documentaries about the sport. Another positive is the soundtrack, with amusing high-energy rock tunes of the era.

30

Village Voice by Zachary Wigon

The crookedness of the narrative is compounded by the film's failure to display its characters' great pleasures (surfing and drugs) in visually expressive ways.

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