
Valerie has disappeared. Detective Zat (Anthony LaPaglia) suspects her husband John (Geoffrey Rush) of having an affair with one of her male patients, Patrick Phelan. John and Zat discuss marriage in a moment of truth. Summary by Paul Byrnes.
Interesting use of contrast – John tells the truth, Zat lies about cheating on his wife – but Zat is supposed to be the one who is seeking the truth.
In the midst of a midlife crisis, detective Leon Zat (Anthony LaPaglia) investigates the disappearance of a prominent psychiatrist, Dr Valerie Somers (Barbara Hershey). Zat suspects her husband John Knox (Geoffrey Rush) of having had a homosexual affair with Patrick Phelan, one of her patients (Peter Phelps). Zat discovers his wife Sonja (Kerry Armstrong) was also a patient. Suspicion then falls on a young unemployed man, Nik Daniels (Vince Colosimo), when a neighbour, Jane O’May (Rachael Blake) reports him. All these lives begin to unravel under the pressure of suspicion.
After his brilliant debut film, Bliss (1985), based on a novel by Peter Carey, director Ray Lawrence spent 15 years trying to get finance for his second film. Several projects failed before he got to make Lantana, but the film did not disappoint – it was a critical and popular success.
Lantana is distinctly different to most contemporary Australian films – sparser, darker, more emotionally mysterious. Sydney is not shown as the beautiful sunny city we’re used to. It’s an urban drama about degrees of trust, with a large ensemble cast, and an utterly serious tone. Andrew Bovell’s script, adapted from his own play, uses coincidence to connect a series of characters who are seemingly unconnected, but going through similar crises of life. The film is partly about the messiness of real relationships, the way that emotions spill over between work, home and leisure. LaPaglia’s detective, for instance, carries his frustrations about home to work with him; Barbara Hershey’s psychiatrist, who’s grieving for a murdered daughter, lashes out at a stranger on the street.
The name of the film confused audiences overseas – and some at home. Lantana is in fact a weed – a thick bush, hard to get rid of, but with a beautiful flower. ‘Once you go past that,’ said Lawrence, ‘it’s all thorns’.
Notes by Paul Byrnes
This clip shows an exchange between John Knox (Geoffrey Rush) and Detective Leon Zat (Anthony LaPaglia), who is investigating the disappearance of John’s wife, Valerie Somers. When Leon questions John about his whereabouts on the night of Valerie’s disappearance, John responds by asking Leon if he has ever cheated on his wife and what holds his marriage together, unwittingly confronting Leon with his own infidelity and troubled relationship. The conversation takes place on the treetop balcony of John’s house, in a bush setting.
Education notes provided by The Learning Federation and Education Services Australia
This clip starts approximately 1 hour 25 minutes into the feature.
John and Detective Zat are at a table on a balcony overlooking bushland. Birdsong and bush sounds in the background.
John Have you ever cheated on your wife?
Detective Zat No.
John Never desired another woman?
Zat Yes, of course I have.
John But you’ve never acted on that?
Zat No.
John Well, you’re a better man than I am.
Zat So there is someone else?
John No. There was someone once. A woman. Once that’s happened you are never entirely believed again. Something gets broken, permanently. Trust, I suppose. When that happens anything is possible, it would seem. You don’t lose a daughter like we lost Eleanor without some damage.
Zat So, where were you?
John I left work late. I stopped at the place where my daughter was killed. I go there. A lot. Valerie didn’t know that.
Zat And you didn’t tell her?
John shakes his head.
Zat Why not, John?
John turns away for a moment.
John What holds your marriage together, Leon?
Zat Ah … Loyalty. Love. Maybe habit, sometimes passion, our kids.
John Ours is held together by grief. There wasn’t much else left.
Zat So are you saying you didn’t love her anymore?
John I’m saying that sometimes love isn’t enough.
The National Film and Sound Archive of Australia acknowledges Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the Traditional Custodians of the land on which we work and live and gives respect to their Elders both past and present.