Starring: Mia Waskiowska, Adam Driver, Roly Mintuma
Looking for excitement and to explore the environment she loves, Robyn Davidson (Wasikowska) leaves her home in Alice Springs in 1977 with four camels and her dog Diggity, walking over 2000 miles through the Australian outback to the Indian Ocean. On the way, Robyn routinely meets with American photographer Rick Smolan (Driver), documenting her journey for National Geographic as Robyn tries to do what many consider to be impossible.
Whilst it may nor be a very well known story internationally, there has long been talk of a film adaptation of Tracks, Robyn Davidson's non-fiction account of her trek through the outback. In fact, film projects based the book (with Davidson's role being bandied around the likes of Julia Roberts and Nicole Kidman) have been around before the birth of the film's ultimate lead, twenty-four-year-old Mia Wasikowska. So with the film finally here the results are fine, impressive in places, but not perfect.
Fittingly, Tracks is a film centred around its landscape. Almost all of the movie takes place against the backdrop of the Australian outback, awash with orange sand and the use of camera angles (often very close to Wasikowska) emphasise the sheer expanse of the region to the point where it almost seems limitless, yet the character of Australia is very much present. Robyn Davidson may be the main character, but in many ways Australia is the star, tapping into the varied wildlife and also giving an insight into the various aboriginal communities and their customs, which the film treats an extremely high level of respect (the film even opens with a disclaimer warning certain groups that the depiction of dead bodies in the film may offend their cultural beliefs).
With it's theme of a lone individual striving through the wilderness in an almost philosophical fashion, there are comparisons to be made with the work of Werner Herzog, albeit this is far lighter than most Herzog's fare (even Fitzacarraldo (1981) one of Herzog's friendlier features is tougher than this) but rather than Herzog's distinctive Bavarian whisper telling of the fragile nature of man in a world he assumes as his own, we instead get Mia Wasikowska's Robyn giving account to her journey and her view on life. Wasikowska's a fine actress and an interesting screen presence, but her voiceover segments lack some of the passion needed, especially in the early going. Adam Driver makes for a likeable nice guy in the second-highest role as an American photographer, but it's a standard role that presents little challenge. Unknown Roly Mimtura is very enjoyable in his role as an elderly aboriginal, tasked with leading Robyn through areas forbidden for lone female travellers.
Tracks is a reverent piece of film in both good and bad ways. On the down side, the film sometimes lacks momentum as it gets bogged down in portentousness, but it's a film of visual splendour that really goves the sense of a journey travelled down a dusty, but undeniably beautiful, trail.