“Australia” was marketed for weeks before its opening as an epic, and if large portions are any measure of that, “Australia” is truly an epic film production. But large portions don’t necessarily make for great filmmaking, and in this case, much of the impact of the story is overwhelmed by the saccharine nature of its telling, and the film becomes a weepy, treacly tear-jerker.
Producer/co-writer and director Baz Luhrmann has created a long, rambling motion picture that is part Western, part war movie and part romance, and the story is nursed along via narrative from a biracial boy named Nullah (Brandon Walters), who narrates the story from his perspective.
Lady Sarah Ashley (Nicole Kidman) arrives in northern Australia just before the outbreak of World War II to check on her errant husband and the family estate of Faraway Downs, but finds upon her arrival that her husband has been murdered, apparently by the local land boss (Bryan Brown), who seems to want things his own way.