
Danny (Noah Taylor) gets a dunking from classmates for writing secret love poetry; Trevor (Ben Mendelsohn) rescues him and wins favour from his love interest, Freya (Loene Carmen). Summary by Paul Byrnes.
Lots of schoolyard politics, which is used in the film like a mirror – the adults don’t behave any better in public situations, like the pub.
Danny (Noah Taylor) is a gawky 15-year-old, in love with his best friend, the beautiful and free-spirited Freya (Loene Carmen). They’re misfits in a country town in NSW in 1962. When Freya falls for Trevor (Ben Mendelsohn), football star and apprentice delinquent, Danny’s sexual longing turns to jealous confusion. As he tries to win her back, Danny uncovers a dark secret in the town’s past.
Beneath its quirky story of coming of age in rural Australia, The Year My Voice Broke is a savage portrait of a small town hypocrisy and sexual repression. The beauty of the hills around the town, where Freya and Danny have played together since childhood, is a kind of paradise, in marked contrast to the unhappy living rooms below, where adult problems play out in secret shame. Writer-director John Duigan continually emphasises high and low angles of view and constructs a sense of paradise lost, with a strongly emotional core. The film is an unusual mix – both romantic pastorale, a nostalgic memoir of growing up in the countryside, and a shocking denunciation of its values. The latter was not especially new, but the film’s delicate balance of dark and light tone, especially its use of laconic humour (the mid-year dance, and Trevor’s constant car thefts) made the film very popular with audiences. Geoff Burton’s cinematography is of immense value in establishing a strong sense of place. The film was followed three years later by a sequel, Flirting, in which Danny, played again by Noah Taylor, goes to boarding school.
Notes by Paul Byrnes
This clip shows Danny Embling (Noah Taylor) being tormented in the school toilets by bullies, who taunt him, saying that his love poetry has been found. Danny races into the playground to find another boy and girl sending up his poetry in front of an audience of other students. Danny is wrestled back to the girls’ toilets, where the bullies force his head into a toilet bowl and flush the toilet. An older boy, Trevor, (Ben Mendelsohn), enters, forcibly removes the bullies, takes them outside and slams their heads into a wall, to the enjoyment of onlookers. Freya (Loene Carmen) enters the toilets, where Danny is sitting dejectedly in a cubicle with the door closed, and asks if he is all right.
Education notes provided by The Learning Federation and Education Services Australia
This clip starts approximately 23 minutes into the feature.
Danny is standing alone at a urinal. Another student appears in the doorway.
Boy Oh, here he is. The poet.
Danny What?
Boy (inaudible)’s found all that stuff you’ve been writing in your desk.
They both go outside to the playground. A boy is mockingly reading Danny’s poem out to a laughing crowd of students.
Boy 2 ‘We once were friends and still are now, but you think I’m too young to love. But I know…’
Danny Give us it back or I’ll belt ya!
Girl Oh, you’re so sensitive, Danny. ‘If only I could prove it to you, you would see – we could become two and be forever free.’
Boy OK, into the dunny!
Danny No!
All the students rush noisily into the toilets, Danny in a headlock.
Boy Are you a girl, Danny?
Danny Fuck off!
Boy Washing your hair are you, Danny?
Boy 2 Got a bit of soap down there, Danny?
Boy One, two, three, down!
All cheer as the boys flush Danny’s head down the toilet.
Boy Come on, get it down there! How’s it feeling?
Trevor comes pushing through the assembled students.
Trevor Bloody good odds, isn’t it, hey?
Boy 2 He’s thirsty, Trev. Come on.
Trevor Put him down.
Boy It was just a joke, Trev.
Boy 2 Yeah. Yeah, he’s alright. He was laughing.
Trevor drags the two perpetrators violently from the bathroom, amidst their protests.
Boy 2 Only muckin’ around anyway! He was laughing! No! No!
Trevor Heads or tails, fellas? Alright, heads it is!
He slams their heads into the side of the building, drawing a shy smile from Freya.
Trevor Sounded hollow, I reckon.
Freya goes into the toilets to check on Danny.
Freya Danny? You alright?
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.