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This topic contains:
- overall comments and recommendations
- details about Opal Dream's classification
and consumer advice lines
- a review of Opal Dream completed by Young
Media Australia (YMA) on 28 September 2006.
Overall comments and recommendations
| Children under 8 |
Not recommended due to violence, themes, scary
scenes and language |
| Children aged 8-13 |
Parental guidance recommended |
| Children over the age of 13 |
Should be ok to see this movie with or without
parental guidance |
About the movie
This section contains details about the movie, including its classification
by the Office of Film and Literature Classification (OFLC) and the
associated consumer advice lines.
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Name of movie
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Opal Dream
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Rating
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PG
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Consumer advice lines
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Mild themes, Mild violence, Mild coarse language
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Length
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85 minutes
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YMA review
This review of the movie Opal Dream contains
the following information:
A synopsis of the story
Kellyanne Williamson (Sapphire Boyce) lives in the small
outback town of Coober Pedy with her mother Annie (Jacqueline
Mackenzie) who works at a local grocery store; her father
Rex (Vince Colosimo) who is doing his best to mine opals
(but without any success); and an older brother Ashmol
(Christian Byers) who is utterly humiliated by his sister's
close association with two imaginary friends Pobby and
Dingan.
Kellyanne doesn't see what all the fuss is about and takes
Pobby and Dingan everywhere. In an effort to help Kellyanne
distance herself from her imaginary friends, and in the
hope that she will make some real ones, her father offers
to take Pobby and Dingan out mining with him for the day.
Upon returning that night it appears that Pobby and Dingan
are missing. Terribly distraught Kellyanne orders her father
to take her back to the mine in order to find them. Rex
looks everywhere and in the process is accused of stealing
from someone else's claim. Overnight the town turns against
the Williamson family and Kellyanne comes down with a mystery
illness, meanwhile Pobby and Dingan are still missing.
In the hopes of helping his sister recover, Ashmol enlists
the help of the entire town in the search for Pobby and
Dingan.
Themes
Children and adolescents may react adversely at
different ages to themes of crime, suicide, drug and
alcohol dependence, death, serious illness, family
breakdown, death or separation from a parent, animal
distress or cruelty to animals, children as victims,
natural disasters and racism. Occasionally reviews
may also signal themes that some parents may simply
wish to know about.
Family conflict, Death and loss
Use of violence
Research shows that children are at risk of learning
that violence is an acceptable means of conflict resolution
when violence is glamourised, performed by an attractive
hero, successful, has few real life consequences, is
set in a comic context and / or is mostly perpetrated
by male characters with female victims, or by one race
against another.
Repeated exposure to violent content can reinforce the
message that violence is an acceptable means of conflict
resolution. Repeated exposure also increases the risks
that children will become desensitised to the use of
violence in real life or develop an exaggerated view
about the prevalence and likelihood of violence in their
own world.
There is some violence in this movie including:
- Ashmol pretends to shoot at Pobby and Dingan
as they flee to their house. Kellyanne taunts him: “Their
house is bullet proof.”
- Ashmol and Rex make and detonate their
own explosives. Unfortunately half their mine collapses,
nearly killing Rex and apparently (as we learn later)
killing Pobby and Dingan.
- Rex is threatened with a gun in front
of his kids. A struggle ensues and the gun goes off.
We later see that the gun's owner was shot in the foot.
- a mob hangs a dummy of a man from a tree,
with a sign that reads ‘Ratter'
- the same mob throws some sort of explosive
device into the Williamsons' yard, which causes the
trailer that Kellyanne used as a home for Pobby and
Dingan to burst into flames
- Rex goes to sort things out with the
men who threatened him and is beaten to the ground
as Ashmol watches on
- Local kids tie a dead rat to the front
of Ashmol's bike and call him a ratter
Material that may scare or disturb children
Under five
Children under five are most likely to be frightened
by scary visual images, such as monsters, physical transformations.
The above-mentioned violent scenes, could disturb under
5s, in particular the scene in which Rex is threatened
with a gun. It is the middle of the night when the gun
is thrust in Rex's face and the children, who are watching
the scene unfold, are clearly terrified. The miner with
the gun looks angry and evil. The look on the miner's
face, the children's fear and the intensity of the scene
could scare some young viewers.
Aged five to eight
Children aged five to eight will also be frightened
by scary visual images and will also be disturbed by
depictions of the death of a parent, a child abandoned
or separated from parents, children or animals being
hurt or threatened and / or natural disasters.
In addition to the above-mentioned violent scenes, there
are some scenes in this movie that could scare or disturb
children aged five to eight , including the following:
- when Ashmol and his dad detonate the
explosives at the mine it takes a few minutes for Rex
to come back up and there are a tense few minutes where
Ashmol is clearly worried after having heard the mine
collapse
- when the explosives are thrown into
the front yard, Kellyanne watches her playhouse go
up in flames. She stares in shock at a dark figure
dangling from a noose and, while not hysterical, is
clearly disturbed by the images and physically becomes
much sicker.
- it is the middle of the night when Ashmol
agrees to go back down the mineshaft to look for
Pobby and Dingan. He is clearly scared about running
into the miner again and is very nervous as he climbs
down into the dark tunnel. There are many creaking
and clanking sounds that lend a creepy, eeriness to
the scene. As he searches through the rubble his own
breathing is shallow and scared as he finds something
(we are later told their bodies) and collects evidence
to show Kellyanne.
Aged eight to thirteen
Children aged eight to thirteen are most likely to be
frightened by realistic threats and dangers, violence
or threat of violence and / or stories in which children
are hurt or threatened
There are no other scenes in this movie that would upset
children of this age, but some of the scenes described
above could be scary for some children at the younger
end of this age group or for those susceptible to its
themes.
Over the age of thirteen
Children over the age of thirteen are most likely to
be frightened by realistic physical harm or threats,
molestation or sexual assault and / or threats from aliens
or the occult.
It is unlikely that this film would scare or disturb
children over the age of thirteen.
Product placement
None
Sexual references
None
Nudity and sexual activity
There is one scene in which Rex and Annie start passionately
kissing in the living room, and are then later it shown
in bed, apparently naked, and under a sheet. Rex kisses
Annie again before the scene fades into darkness.
Use of substances
There is some use of substances in this movie, including:
- beer was consumed throughout the movie
and numerous references made to it
- an assortment of alcoholic beverages
was consumed in a bar, in which patrons were also smoking.
Coarse language
There is some coarse language in this movie, including:
The movie's message
Opal Dream is a somewhat slow-paced drama
based on the book Pobby and Dingan by Ben Rice.
It will appeal to fans of the book, lovers of the outback
and others who relate to the movie's theme.
The main messages from this movie are that it is important
to have a dream and that when you believe in something
it is real, regardless of whether or not other people
see what you see.
Values in this movie that parents may wish to reinforce
with their children include:
- loyalty
- selflessness
- helpfulness
- compassion.
This movie could also give parents the opportunity to
discuss with their children attitudes and behaviours,
and their real-life consequences, such as.
- taking action based on gossip, without
making an effort to ascertain the truth.
- accusing someone without proof
- using violence as a means to solve problems
or seek revenge.

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