Burned Bridge (TV mini-series)
Picture: C
Sound: C Extras: D Episodes: C+
From the early 1990s comes a mini-series form Australia
called Burned Bridge, which has a whole new reason to be noticed since
its original broadcast: Cate Blanchett. The 11-hour, 13-part work involves the conflicts between the
police, the Aborigines, white Australians, and other aspects of culture
clash. This gets headier when a young
Aboriginal girl is brutally murdered and dumped in the backwoods.
Meantime, we see the racial tensions, Beth Ashton’s
(Blanchett) going from a white boyfriend/radio talk show host, to Aboriginal
police officer. The series also takes
time to try to get us into the Aboriginal world, which is likely still rare in
dramatic Australian TV. We see trouble
within the police, trouble within the Aboriginal community, trouble in people’s
daily lives, and trouble tracking down the killer.
There is even more, but the mini-series has pacing
problems, runs too much into melodrama, is not as well organized as it should
be, and has four directors with varying styles. This drags the storyline out far too much, while the teleplays
seem disjoined in total. Blanchett is
good, while the rest of the cast is not too bad. Prison moments pale to, say, HBO’s series Oz (which has
nothing to do with Australia, of course).
It was smart to have Blanchett as the female lead, but there is only so
much she can do. By default, this is
interesting for those who do not see much Australian TV at all, but wears thin
quickly. It gets interesting here and
there, but does not have the impact the box promises.
The full screen, color image is taped on analog Pal
videotape, but the transfer is not the best example of that. The colors bleed slightly throughout. There is not any tape damage, but I was
still surprised how hazy it looked. The
Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono was adequate to capture dialogue and the mixed
music. The extras include some biographies,
production notes, and an abstract hour-long program from Australian TV about
the racial divide in real life down under.
I should add that the mystery is not as much of a focus as
it should have been. The series comes
dangerously close to trivializing the young murdered girl in the process of so
many storylines. Somewhat scattered is
the best way to describe this series ultimately, but Blanchett is compelling
and Burned Bridge is not a disaster or the overblown commercial
mini-series like the kind that killed the form in the U.S., so you might want
to catch it if you are really curious.
- Nicholas Sheffo