I hope your favourite quote made it into this reaction! I'm sure there's quite a few that I missed... I had to chop this up quite a bit for TH-cam but you can watch the extended ad-free edit + full length reaction here: patreon.com/chrissiereacts I hope you enjoy!!
Love ya to watch a movie starring Heath ledger and Orlando bloom called “Ned Kelly” if you haven’t heard of Ned Kelly his a real bloke wh o some say was persecuted. Some call him a hero some call him a cold blooded murderer. Please check it out
Bonnie Doon is a real town. In Australia you can - or used to be able to lease a bit of land cheaply in some country municipalities and put a "shack" up on it. I think they have a shack at Bonnie Doon. A few shacks still exist but for the most part the councils stopped renew the leases so shacks for the workng man are pretty much no more.
Fun fact, Costas Kilias, who play Farouk, is actually a Magistrate (ie. kind of a lower court judge) in Victoria. "He say plane fly overhead, drop value. I don't care. In Beirut, plane fly over, drop bomb. I like these planes"
"Straight to the pool room" "ah the serenity" and "tell 'im he's dreaming" are just part of the Aussie vernacluar now as is so much else from this movie. It's just the vibe down here. Great choice.
I have a little step that I use to reach my microwave; it's name is Microwave Jenny. Also when anyone misses a big prize, we say "If only they'd known the price of the luggage."
Such a brilliant Australian story. "Tell him he's dreamin'" has found it's way in to our lexicon. One thing Australia is known for (but something that is sadly fading) is being a classless society, whether you are people of basic means and education (like the Kerrigans) or highly educated, successful and affluent (like Laurie, the QC), no-one is any better than anyone else. At the end of the movie the narrator says "Laurie even went fishing with Dad, he thought it was just to be polite, but he goes all the time". I can verify the sentiment shown as I know an elderly couple who were not well-off and the husband was a real knock-about bloke. When his wife was battling cancer they had one of the countrie's leading specialist (thanks to Medicare). The highly skilled surgeon and the husband became mates and did go fishing together for years after the wife died. The Castle might be simplistic, the dialogue basic, but the sentiment at the heart of the story is so Australian and so lovingly told.
I love the way it treats the family. They’re simple, unsophisticated, unpretentious, loving and supportive. They’re sort of the butt of a lot of the jokes, but it’s in such good nature that’s it doesn’t feel unkind or mocking.
Favorite quote." How's the serenity ". I had the privilege of meeting Charles 'Bud' Tingwell in the late 1990s and he was as much of a humble gentleman in private as he was on screen. R.I.P. Bud 1923-2009.
I remember listening to Martin and Molloy on the radio (one timezone later) and everybody having no clue who the celebrity in the bag was and asking stupid, stupid questions while I was screaming at the dashboard "it's Bud bloody Tingwell, ask him if he was in a movie with Richard Burton!" He had such a distinctive voice, how on earth could you not recognise it?
Loved him growing up when I saw him in Homicide when I was in primary school (which used to scare the crap out of me). Why mum let us watch that but not the Three Stooges as she thought that we would belt each other with frying pans over the head (three girls mind you) but allowed us to watch frightening murder tv shows?
I noticed there are several changes between the original version and the version for international distribution. - "Travel...from Melbourne to Sydney" was originally "Airbus...Brisbane via Sydney" - "...rob the gas station" was originally "...rob the petrol station." - "Meatloaf" was changed from "Rissoles." - "Sunshine Tech" was changed from "Sunshine Tafe." - "Three weeks later, Dad went to the High court of Australia, which is the highest court of Australia" was the change from "Three weeks later, Mr Hammill, Dad, and Dennis went to the High Court in Canberra." Much of the soundtrack music was also replaced, which is a shame as the original music added a lot of charm.
This is one of the most quoted movies ever, at least in Australia. Nearly 30 years on, and I regularly hear Castle-isms in everyday life. I do still use several myself!
This is actually one of Adam Sandlers favourite comedies. Thanks for reacting to it. Edit: the film took five weeks from original inception to final cut. The screenplay was written in two weeks, shot in ten days and taken to rough cut in two weeks
This movie has informed so much of my family's language. A nice calm evening (how's the serenity), driving fast (see that? Back there), any time my kids bring something home from school (this is going straight to the pool room). It's a classic and one of the best Australian movies ever made.
Mabo refers to one of Australia’s most famous cases that overturned the idea of “Terra Nullius” which allowed the British to colonise land claimed by no other nation. It paved the way for Aboriginal land rights, and so is a strangely relevant legal joke due to the idea that you can’t just come in and take someone’s home…
Small correction: Aboriginal land rights already existed. South Australis had enacted them in the '70s. Mabo made them nationwide and under a single, unified legal rubric rather than a state-by-state basis.
@@twrampage Everything nominate3d that year as. we live in a world where the nonsense of Hurt Locker won Best Picture and Black Hawk Down didn't get close despite being the most realistic War film ever - such is life.
Chrissie, you did such a great job getting gist of the Aussie vernacular and slang! You also seemed to pick up the heavy accents in Chopper very well and it’s about as hard as it gets to follow for non aussies. At its base The Castle is a simple heartwarming story about a loving family that seems to touch us all. Another great film to consider from the same production company is The Dish (2000). As a side note the real property was sold some years ago and the new owners wanted to build a new house on the land. Thankfully someone was able to buy the house and have it picked up and freighted up to Beechworth further North in the state. The “holiday house” in Bonnie Doon is available to rent on Airbnb complete with outdoor punching bag, dog kennels and a pool room!
More Aussies quote from The Castle, than any movie ever..”tell him he’s dreamin,” strait to the pool room, and many more. I’ve seen this movie several times and still love it. The acting, the respectful they have for each other, can’t beat it. It’s soooo Australian. ♥️🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺
I never knew they changed some dialogue for American viewers. So sweet. My family and I absolutely adore this movie. Fantastic storytelling. So heartfelt
Not doubting you and couldn't imagine this film would resonate with the yanks, but to change the dialouge would make the whole movie pointless.Yank's have tried it on before ,leave well enough alone. they have some really great stuff but the castle was just for us.Unigue and ours
I was given a gift at work for my birthday a few weeks ago. ‘Straight to the poolroom’ was part of my thank you speech. The building I work in is part of the old Sunshine TAFE (Tech) 😁
Thankyou for reviewing this at this time. Our family is going thru many difficulties atm and this is exactly what I had to see again, it brought tears to my eyes. Cheers.
Bud Tingwell's mastery of the thespian arts was self-evident in the demanding role of Gramps in that highbrow segment drama, 'Charlie the Wonder Dog'-the shining light of The Late Show.
I love that you laugh at this Australian Classic, not everyone from overseas gets our silly humour. :) The people responsible for this movie have done other great ones like "The Dish" and also a series called "Utopia" about australian government and it's pretty much a documentary in how accurate it is. It's hilarious. Keep up the great videos!
I was born a lower class Australian, worked hard and did well... and this is one of my most fave movies ever. I met an upper class English girl, we got married. I tried showing my new English family this movie as it meant so much to me... they didn't get it. In fact they got bored. And they were honestly really good people. It was after that I understood this movie only makes sense to the downtrodden, regardless of nationality. Adore this movie so much...: straight to the pool room' is forever in my vocabulary. X
Your English in-laws are very astute. This so called comedy is a one joke film, namely taking the piss and laughing at a bunch of Melbourne embiciles is thin comedic material indeed. I too am from a working class Australian background and glad you can be so easily amused. Oh, the inanity of it all.
I take offence at people being labelled as 'working, lower class ' in Australia. There is no class system in Australia such as that in Britain. Aussies are not inhibited by such a derogatory label and 'kept in their place'. In Australia we have the freedom to not have such labels put on us. Thankfully we do not have an UNELECTED House Of LORDS, there because of ancient hereditary titles, in the upper house in our Government. We value each other by our conduct, of being good and descent people, not by how by much wealth, status and titles that we have.
@@davidparris7167 there are many senses of humour, not everyone likes the same thing...and to degenerate someone for having a different sense of humour to yours... well that's just ignorant, deadset. As the band Suicidal Tendencies once said...'just coz you don't like it, doesn't mean it isn't good... and just coz you don't understand it, don't mean it doesn't make sense '. Wise words indeed.
I live in Sydney. I used to have a holiday house up the coast around Lake Macquarie. It was called Bonnie Doon! We'd often sit on the back deck of an evening and enjoy the serenity. I also owned a boat on Lake Macquarie called "Dreamin'". Downstairs, on the wall, I had the poster of the movie surrounded by a pair of home made jousting sticks, a collage of powerline pictures, a couple of greyhound pictures and a framed front page of The Trading Post dated the day we settled on the property. The Castle is my all time favourite movie!!
Melbourne bloke here. I grew up around the corner from the actual place. The actual house is in Strathmore, and Coolaraoo is nowhere near it. (It's about 5km away). I grew up in the flight path of the Essendon Airport. The front yard of the house it was filmed in is STILL full of cars. We're going to have to sell the old place because Mum's passed and Dad is in a nursing home and no longer knows who we are. Also, in the 1940's my Grandfather was Chief Warder at Pentridge, which is now a housing development, not a prison anymore.
Oh and another thing....4 years ago I move to a neighbourhood with an autobodywork shop in it. It's called Kerrigan's! I though it was a huge joke for about a year.....then I found out it was the place that this film borrowed the wrecker from. Rather than repaint the truck, they rewrote the script, and the family was renamed as The Kerrigans.
@@gavanmitchell9095 Sadly no, as I discovered today. It was knocked down and redeveloped....the tenants apparently hadn't treated it well. I checked in today when I was over clearing out my parent's house (bloody traumatic). The house with all the cars I thought was it is a few doors down.
As an 50yo Aussie I can relate to this movie so much. My parents/ familyare very much like this. Walking cliches, close and love to take the piss. Australia is this and so much more and I know after this you’ll want to visit. And if nothing else, The Castle "got you dreamin!”
I’m Australian and grew up in pretty much the same exact level of wealth as the family in this movie. It’s not about how shiny something is, but how much shine you’ve worn off it by living. Family is everything.
Regarding the accent, it's not the Melbourne accent - it's everywhere. Just the standard bogan accent, one of the strongest forms (but not the very strongest)
Rob Sitch and the Working Dog team's greatest work is the series Frontline, a behind the scenes comedy about a fictional evening current affairs show. If I had a pool room, it would go straight there. The perpetually broken photocopier was also a running gag in Frontline, where the repairman was often seen in the background working on it.
@@jeremykothe2847 The games was produced by Beyond International & ABC TV, created and written by Ross Stevenson and John Clarke RIP (of Clarke & Dawe). Same calibre of comedy.
I absolutely loved this movie. I watched it so many times growing up before I realised that when Dale said he dug another hole and it's filling with water, he accidentally hit a water main.
27 Years later I'll be fishing with friends or family, doesn't really matter where. In a quiet moment, someone always comes out with the line, "How's the serenity"
We pass through Bonnie Doon a couple of times a year on the way to visit relatives. Great spot to take break. There’s a restaurant at the rest stop which proudly serves the Serenity Burger.
Really enjoyed your reaction to this iconic Aussie Movie. It was actually filmed in 10 days by a production company called Working Dog. Everyone down here quotes this movie. “This is goin’ straight to the pool room”, “how’s the serenity”, “you are an ideas man”, “I think we can test it better”, “it’s the vibe”, “tell em they’re dreamin”, “now that is a head of hair”, “we’re goin’ to Bonnydoon”, “what do you know about lead?” and the list goes on. Eric Bana actually started out as a comedian on Australian sketch comedy shows with the people who formed Working Dog called Full Frontal. Quite politically incorrect by today’s standards in afraid but hugely popular. Anyway, here endeth the lesson, glad you enjoyed it. All the best
Bonnie Doon is a town in Victoria Australia about 90mins NE of Melbourne, on the edge of Lake Eildon. Population is only a few hundred permanent residents but on weekends and holidays it becomes thousands who bring up their boats, jetskis, caravans, tents etc. Eildon finally has a decent amount of water in it after many years of drought that made boating on the lake pretty tough.
It's beautiful up there as well. I live in Morwell, a couple hours away from there and we used to go water skiing on weekends. This was the early 90's too.
I used to go to Eildon regularly when Mum and Dad lived there 70's to around 05. Dad was the Jerusalem Creek caravan & houseboat park manager before taking over the town center sports store. He retired in the late 1980's
Thankyou for the great reaction, can't believe someone reacted to this .. aussie humor is a bit different and if you have watched Kath & Kim it's noice different unusual haha ...this is my fave aussie movie followed by Muriels Wedding and Malcolm .. we have many more but that is my top 3 ..some of the actors are well known in Australia 'Darryl' was 'Uncle Harry' in a 70's show The Sullivans... 'Sal' was 'Molly' in well loved aussie show A Country Practice and a couple other shows and 'Tracy' was a main character in Muriels Wedding and of course Eric Bana was in Chopper after the castle but was well known for being on a comedy show with the ladies that are Kath & Kim I guess a bit like your SNL .. Eric played a character called Poida (Peter). As you can tell we love this movie and the quotes from the movie are well used still today. fun fact for our family that when daryl first goes to see dennis he ties the dogs up outside the Brunswick Town Hall my hometown I went to High School in.
If you liked this, there is another very Aussie movie called Malcolm from 1986. Not as well known as The Castle, but is another comedy gem. Might not be a big hit for the channel though...
my top 3 The Castle Muriels Wedding and Malcolm .. fun fact lol ..drove past them filming the getaway bit at the end of the with the tram front I used to work in Preston and there was a small bridge for just the trams to go over the train line and they filmed there for around 3-4 days.
I always thought Colin Friels would end up becoming a major star internationally. Glad he didn't. I think he's one of those humbler guys with serious acting chops and a social conscience.
Growing up, my grandparents lived in the street where the this was filmed, and one of my best friends lived in the neighbour’s house, and her auntie and uncle lived at “the Kerrigans” 😂 the airport is really at the end of that street, Essendon Airport. It always gives me such a kick when non Aussies discover this little gem. My dad says “tell him he’s dreamin’” at least once a week
If you liked this movie you should see the Australian comedies The Dish and Crackerjack which were created by the same team as The Castle. The Dish is about how instrumental the Parkes Radio Telescope located outside a small rural Australian town was to the Apollo 11 landing on the Moon while Cracerjack is about a small lawn bowling club fighting to not be taken over as a gambling venue. It's the vibe.
The whole team at 'Working Dog ' ,the production company that made this, have success after success in their history. Over 30 years of tv shows ( even a cartoon), movies, books ,radio shows. Not one dud. Currently 3 prime time tv shows . Have You Been Paying Attention?, The Cheap Seats and Thank God You're Here. Legends.
Young Steve Curry, brilliant as 'The King' Graham Kennedy Eric Bana, nuff said. Bud Tingwell great ol fella was even younger in 'Summerfield' 1977 movie,
The house (Castle) was about a 5 minute drive from where I live. It's been moved elsewhere. I also spent a night in Bonnie Doon in the late 1970s. AND, I frequently go shopping very near Dennis Denuto's office. It was up for sale recently.
Loved the breakup of the movie. Most of the best items that have become local language. Tell him he's dreamin, the vibe, suffer in your jocks (which was missed in your clips) & many more. Has to be one of the best comedy movies ever coming from Australia. The Working Dog Production team were responsible for it. They also produced another brilliant comedy called The Dish which is a story about the landing on the moon of Apollo 11 which needed the satellite dish in Parkes New South Wales to maintain a connection to Apollo 11.
Bud Tingwell was a legend on Australian TV (the QC) and all of the actors are huge Australian actors. The best part of the review "I knew they were from Melbourne because I've watched so much Kath and Kim" - you know your stuff Chrissie! Ha ha ha. Thank you for watching such an Aussie movie! Ps. The brother was in Pentridge jail, which is where Chopper served! Very Melbourne 😂😂😂
Australians are so understated, have a way of speaking that leaves lots of things unsaid. and lots of statements are voiced like questions. "How's the serenity" isn't a question, it's more of a statement, like 'This is good, I'm enjoying this'.
@@justice6480 Hope so, been living in Australia most of my life. Far from perfect, but generally well intentioned people. I'm far from perfect myself, who am I to complain?
I went to see this at the movies here in Oz when it came out with family and some friends, and never have I been, even all these years later, where the theatre was in a constant state of laughter. The scene where the dad walks out on the deck with his Ugg boots on got the whole theatre in stitches. Wonderful movie, an absolute classic and a great representation of Australia at the time; we all related.
If you wanna see a VERY heartbreaking but brilliant australian film, watch Angel Baby 1995, very underrated, it would have won oscars galore if it was a US made film I think
I really like your videos. This movie is still quoted to this day. It’s not uncommon to hear someone say on receiving something nice “this is going straight to the poolroom” or when you having difficulty explaining something “it’s Mabo, it’s the vibe”.
Wayne Hope the brother in jail writes heap of Aussie tv comedy with his wife Robyn Butler. The Librarians , Upper Middle Bogan, Very Small business. I think he has a hand in Kath and Kim also.
Enjoyed seeing a non-Australian discover this. Interesting you mention Kath and Kim. While technically there’s not any crossover of major creatives between this and Kath and Kim, the people who did this were part of the same generation of comedians and there was a lot of crossover and interaction on projects along the way. And obviously there are distinct similarities jn the sort of person they are lovingly portraying (a variation on / subtype of the Australian bogan stereotype.)
Brilliant film iconic in Australia. Still quoted almost daily 20+ year's on! Especially Tell'm their dreaming and That's going straight to the pool room!
Gettin' Square starring David Wenham, Sam Worthington and Timothy Spall is for me, by far the funniest Australian movie ever. A little known gem of a movie, set in the Qld Gold Coast. There is a court-room scene that is absolutely side-splittingly freakin hilarious
Chrissie, dead set…you have the best damn laugh - it’s über infectious and endearing. Love the fact you thought it was wholesome even though the language pushed the boundaries at times. Keep it up. I am now officially a fan and subscriber.
Holy crap Dale was so typical of the mid 80s. Its shocking how spot on this was. Sadly I think I heard the house in Melbourne this movie was filmed in was bulldozed a couple of years ago. End of an era. Lol Sunshine tech. Oddly that accent showcased in Melbourne is only still heard in pockets - it was quite common back in the day.
The house is in Beechworth. Very run down It was going to be used as the office of a Caravan Park. There is a Wooden statue of Darryl our the front with a woolen beanie and tell them their dreaming carved around the bottom. I have photoes of it.
Thank you so much girl for choosing this reaction. All of the jokes landed, and you caught them all. But yeah, this comment section here is an awesome read!!!
You do know that with the death of the Queen, all of the Queen’s Counsels (Q.C) became the King’s Counsels (K.C) in Australia. So today, in Australia, there is no Q.C.
The interplay between mum and dad was so sweet. The actress who played mum - Anne Haddy - had a huge soap opera type role as Molly in A Country Practice back in the 80s. The episodes leading up to her death were a national tragedy.
"rob a gas station"...that was a very interesting choice of words for the film, as an Australian would never use this terminology. It would be service station (servo) or petrol station.
They replaced *a lot* of the dialogue for the US version. Whole thing was a little weird to watch. Sunshine TAFE became Sunshine Tech, rissoles became meat loaf, two stroke became diesel, camira became Corolla etc.
The entire production cost for the movie was only AU$30,000. Just goes to prove that a great story always wins. Tell Hollywood they’re bloody dreamin’.
Such a good natured, sweet hearted film. My favourite part 17:29 is Daryl and Lawrence discussing how proud they are of their children. Totally different socio-economic classes and it doesn’t matter one bit because there’s the common ground. I wish Australia really was like that.
Bonnie Down - a small Victorian town popular for water sports on Lake Eildon - when there's not a drought. It was originally a gold mining town but was eventually flooded (compulsorily acquired) to build Eildon Dam.
I hope your favourite quote made it into this reaction! I'm sure there's quite a few that I missed... I had to chop this up quite a bit for TH-cam but you can watch the extended ad-free edit + full length reaction here: patreon.com/chrissiereacts
I hope you enjoy!!
"Tell 'im he's dreamin'"
Love ya to watch a movie starring Heath ledger and Orlando bloom called “Ned Kelly” if you haven’t heard of Ned Kelly his a real bloke wh o some say was persecuted. Some call him a hero some call him a cold blooded murderer. Please check it out
Bonnie Doon is a real town. In Australia you can - or used to be able to lease a bit of land cheaply in some country municipalities and put a "shack" up on it. I think they have a shack at Bonnie Doon. A few shacks still exist but for the most part the councils stopped renew the leases so shacks for the workng man are pretty much no more.
Can ya smell that? Yeah, two-stroke.
You are really pretty, love your smile 🫠.
Fun fact, Costas Kilias, who play Farouk, is actually a Magistrate (ie. kind of a lower court judge) in Victoria. "He say plane fly overhead, drop value. I don't care. In Beirut, plane fly over, drop bomb. I like these planes"
Apparently it’s his robe and gown that Bud Tingwell wears in the courtroom scenes.
I like the scene where he says "you got friend, I got friend. I get friend to put bomb under car and blow you sky high"
That's one of my favourite lines!!
"What's with Wogs and cash"😀🇦🇺
My ex wife used to do extras work. She worked with Costas many times and said he was absolutely lovely to work with, and a total gentleman.
"Straight to the pool room" "ah the serenity" and "tell 'im he's dreaming" are just part of the Aussie vernacluar now as is so much else from this movie. It's just the vibe down here.
Great choice.
In our house it was always " jousting sticks?" if you though it was overpriced. lol
"Smell that, two stroke"
My mate when he's fangin' his boat across Lake Eildon (ie. goin' to Bonnie Doon)..."Listen to that! Singing like a bird!"... Every time!!
"Adds a bit of charm" is used a lot with my mates doing anything to their houses or cars.
I have a little step that I use to reach my microwave; it's name is Microwave Jenny. Also when anyone misses a big prize, we say "If only they'd known the price of the luggage."
I cannot overstate how beloved this is in Australia. How’s the serenity is used by everyone.
Such a brilliant Australian story. "Tell him he's dreamin'" has found it's way in to our lexicon. One thing Australia is known for (but something that is sadly fading) is being a classless society, whether you are people of basic means and education (like the Kerrigans) or highly educated, successful and affluent (like Laurie, the QC), no-one is any better than anyone else. At the end of the movie the narrator says "Laurie even went fishing with Dad, he thought it was just to be polite, but he goes all the time". I can verify the sentiment shown as I know an elderly couple who were not well-off and the husband was a real knock-about bloke. When his wife was battling cancer they had one of the countrie's leading specialist (thanks to Medicare). The highly skilled surgeon and the husband became mates and did go fishing together for years after the wife died. The Castle might be simplistic, the dialogue basic, but the sentiment at the heart of the story is so Australian and so lovingly told.
It does resonate with my Aussie DNA but I'm not sure if current generation would feel the same.
well said.
I love the way it treats the family. They’re simple, unsophisticated, unpretentious, loving and supportive. They’re sort of the butt of a lot of the jokes, but it’s in such good nature that’s it doesn’t feel unkind or mocking.
Favorite quote." How's the serenity ". I had the privilege of meeting Charles 'Bud' Tingwell in the late 1990s and he was as much of a humble gentleman in private as he was on screen. R.I.P. Bud 1923-2009.
I remember listening to Martin and Molloy on the radio (one timezone later) and everybody having no clue who the celebrity in the bag was and asking stupid, stupid questions while I was screaming at the dashboard "it's Bud bloody Tingwell, ask him if he was in a movie with Richard Burton!" He had such a distinctive voice, how on earth could you not recognise it?
And he was a war hero
@@dizzy8246Yes. He flew a Spitfire carrying out photo surveillance.
Loved him growing up when I saw him in Homicide when I was in primary school (which used to scare the crap out of me). Why mum let us watch that but not the Three Stooges as she thought that we would belt each other with frying pans over the head (three girls mind you) but allowed us to watch frightening murder tv shows?
I noticed there are several changes between the original version and the version for international distribution.
- "Travel...from Melbourne to Sydney" was originally "Airbus...Brisbane via Sydney"
- "...rob the gas station" was originally "...rob the petrol station."
- "Meatloaf" was changed from "Rissoles."
- "Sunshine Tech" was changed from "Sunshine Tafe."
- "Three weeks later, Dad went to the High court of Australia, which is the highest court of Australia" was the change from "Three weeks later, Mr Hammill, Dad, and Dennis went to the High Court in Canberra."
Much of the soundtrack music was also replaced, which is a shame as the original music added a lot of charm.
Yeah I noticed it didn’t say rissoles.
Thank you! I thought I was losing it lol
@@darrenramm4874 I also thought that gas station didn't sound right.
Grew up down the street where Sunshine Tafe is now Sunshine tech's on the other side of Ballarat road
Sacrilege! Did they change the trading post to want ads?
I think another Aussie film worth watching is "The Dish" (2000).
Gettin square!
Yes, Gettin Square
yeah , classic 🫡
Also Bad Eggs
Getting Squzre was hilarious.😂
This is one of the most quoted movies ever, at least in Australia.
Nearly 30 years on, and I regularly hear Castle-isms in everyday life. I do still use several myself!
As kiwi, me and a friend still do the 'jousting stick' line, so good.
@@Dannyvirk one of my favourites 😂
of course, it's the vibe.
@@Dannyvirk how much for jousting sticks? Tell him he's joking
You missed one of Eric Bana's best lines! "The food, was a credit to the airline" Hahahaha
This is actually one of Adam Sandlers favourite comedies. Thanks for reacting to it.
Edit: the film took five weeks from original inception to final cut. The screenplay was written in two weeks, shot in ten days and taken to rough cut in two weeks
And had a budget of $50,000 Australian
And rob Snider
Would it also be Eric Bana's first big movie?
🐶 Working Dog Production 👍👍 👍
@@jaxsonaction7921 His first movie of any sort, he had done a fair bit of comedic work on tv before this though.
Don't take offense when an Aussie is making fun of you/giving you a hard time. Take it as a compliment, we only make fun of people we like.
That is so true..if we didn't like you we wouldn't be bothered takin the piss out of ya.
This movie has informed so much of my family's language. A nice calm evening (how's the serenity), driving fast (see that? Back there), any time my kids bring something home from school (this is going straight to the pool room). It's a classic and one of the best Australian movies ever made.
Browsing FB Marketplace, all my family hears from my room is "Tell em their dreamin"
My sister had a farm near Bonnie Doon, so my kids hate me!
Don’t forget this slice of gold…
😆🖕 “Suffer in ya jocks!”
We only use how's the serenity when it's bloody noisy. Like taking your life in your hands crossing the road in the middle of Hanoi traffic.
To this day, whenever I see something weird for sale, out comes "Jousting sticks? How much he want for 'em?"
Mabo refers to one of Australia’s most famous cases that overturned the idea of “Terra Nullius” which allowed the British to colonise land claimed by no other nation. It paved the way for Aboriginal land rights, and so is a strangely relevant legal joke due to the idea that you can’t just come in and take someone’s home…
@PhilMacraken-kz9su good for you. She will not though, Americans know very little history outside their own.
Small correction: Aboriginal land rights already existed. South Australis had enacted them in the '70s. Mabo made them nationwide and under a single, unified legal rubric rather than a state-by-state basis.
“See that chimney there, fake” why is it there? “Charm adds a bit of charm”
8 years after this Eric Bana was playing the lead role in a Spielberg historical drama. Amazing.
i'm always amazed seeing big actors in small beginnings.
Munich ? Awesome movie.
@@potterj09 Should've won best picture that year, was a lot better than Crash.
@@twrampage Everything nominate3d that year as. we live in a world where the nonsense of Hurt Locker won Best Picture and Black Hawk Down didn't get close despite being the most realistic War film ever - such is life.
@@alphaomega2117 Yeah, I know. Saving Private Ryan losing to Shakespeare in Love, of all things, was just nonsense too.
Chrissie, you did such a great job getting gist of the Aussie vernacular and slang! You also seemed to pick up the heavy accents in Chopper very well and it’s about as hard as it gets to follow for non aussies. At its base The Castle is a simple heartwarming story about a loving family that seems to touch us all. Another great film to consider from the same production company is The Dish (2000). As a side note the real property was sold some years ago and the new owners wanted to build a new house on the land. Thankfully someone was able to buy the house and have it picked up and freighted up to Beechworth further North in the state. The “holiday house” in Bonnie Doon is available to rent on Airbnb complete with outdoor punching bag, dog kennels and a pool room!
Yes the Dish, another favourite
More Aussies quote from The Castle, than any movie ever..”tell him he’s dreamin,” strait to the pool room, and many more. I’ve seen this movie several times and still love it. The acting, the respectful they have for each other, can’t beat it. It’s soooo Australian. ♥️🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺
@4:53 In the original version, they are eating rissoles. Since the US wouldn't understand this, they dubbed the line with meatloaf.
Ohhh!! I wondered why he said "these" when referring to meatloaf 😅
my mum nick'd name them "rissoles" arseholes when i was a kid, was funny when mum said we having arseholes for dinner....
Also Sunshine TAFE not Sunshine Tech.
That and I believe the US version refers to the family watching SNL, not Hey Hey it’s Saturday!
It was funniest home videos :)
@@chrissiereacts ah yeah - altered for US audiences, anyway!
I joined the Army in 1996. All the guys i worked with used to get together and watch this every Friday night before going out to the pub
I never knew they changed some dialogue for American viewers.
So sweet.
My family and I absolutely adore this movie.
Fantastic storytelling.
So heartfelt
Not doubting you and couldn't imagine this film would resonate with the yanks, but to change the dialouge would make the whole movie pointless.Yank's have tried it on before ,leave well enough alone. they have some really great stuff but the castle was just for us.Unigue and ours
I was given a gift at work for my birthday a few weeks ago. ‘Straight to the poolroom’ was part of my thank you speech. The building I work in is part of the old Sunshine TAFE (Tech) 😁
Great movie, and influential, I opened an adult Shop in Adelaide and called it ‘The Vibe’
Pretty good name for an adult shop😂
Thankyou for reviewing this at this time. Our family is going thru many difficulties atm and this is exactly what I had to see again, it brought tears to my eyes.
Cheers.
Bud Tingwell's mastery of the thespian arts was self-evident in the demanding role of Gramps in that highbrow segment drama, 'Charlie the Wonder Dog'-the shining light of The Late Show.
Champagne comedy. 🍾
Don't forget the Pissweak kids 🤣🤣
...and The Pissweak Kids.
Honourable mention to the Pissweak kids.
Mick Malloy in the Shit Scared segment was the funniest
Fave quote: "Suffer in ya jocks!"
I love that you laugh at this Australian Classic, not everyone from overseas gets our silly humour. :) The people responsible for this movie have done other great ones like "The Dish" and also a series called "Utopia" about australian government and it's pretty much a documentary in how accurate it is. It's hilarious. Keep up the great videos!
I was born a lower class Australian, worked hard and did well... and this is one of my most fave movies ever. I met an upper class English girl, we got married. I tried showing my new English family this movie as it meant so much to me... they didn't get it. In fact they got bored. And they were honestly really good people. It was after that I understood this movie only makes sense to the downtrodden, regardless of nationality. Adore this movie so much...: straight to the pool room' is forever in my vocabulary. X
Your English in-laws are very astute. This so called comedy is a one joke film, namely taking the piss and laughing at a bunch of Melbourne embiciles is thin comedic material indeed. I too am from a working class Australian background and glad you can be so easily amused. Oh, the inanity of it all.
@@davidparris7167 Out of alllll the words to misspell, it had to be "imbeciles". The irony is delicious!
I take offence at people being labelled as 'working, lower class ' in Australia. There is no class system in Australia such as that in Britain. Aussies are not inhibited by such a derogatory label and 'kept in their place'. In Australia we have the freedom to not have such labels put on us. Thankfully we do not have an UNELECTED House Of LORDS, there because of ancient hereditary titles, in the upper house in our Government. We value each other by our conduct, of being good and descent people, not by how by much wealth, status and titles that we have.
@@nowwithtusks2556 What a bozo. Can't even spell ''all''.
@@davidparris7167 there are many senses of humour, not everyone likes the same thing...and to degenerate someone for having a different sense of humour to yours... well that's just ignorant, deadset. As the band Suicidal Tendencies once said...'just coz you don't like it, doesn't mean it isn't good... and just coz you don't understand it, don't mean it doesn't make sense '. Wise words indeed.
As Australians, this movie is gold to us. Iconic, laconic Australian humour layered with sentiment. Brilliant with its simplicity.
The Castle is an absolute classic, but I’ve got to admit that unless you’re an Aussie a lot of the funny calls will go right over people’s heads.
I live in Sydney. I used to have a holiday house up the coast around Lake Macquarie. It was called Bonnie Doon! We'd often sit on the back deck of an evening and enjoy the serenity. I also owned a boat on Lake Macquarie called "Dreamin'". Downstairs, on the wall, I had the poster of the movie surrounded by a pair of home made jousting sticks, a collage of powerline pictures, a couple of greyhound pictures and a framed front page of The Trading Post dated the day we settled on the property. The Castle is my all time favourite movie!!
You can see why this is a well beloved Aussie classic; it has heart
Straight to the pool room.
Melbourne bloke here. I grew up around the corner from the actual place. The actual house is in Strathmore, and Coolaraoo is nowhere near it. (It's about 5km away). I grew up in the flight path of the Essendon Airport. The front yard of the house it was filmed in is STILL full of cars. We're going to have to sell the old place because Mum's passed and Dad is in a nursing home and no longer knows who we are. Also, in the 1940's my Grandfather was Chief Warder at Pentridge, which is now a housing development, not a prison anymore.
Oh and another thing....4 years ago I move to a neighbourhood with an autobodywork shop in it. It's called Kerrigan's! I though it was a huge joke for about a year.....then I found out it was the place that this film borrowed the wrecker from. Rather than repaint the truck, they rewrote the script, and the family was renamed as The Kerrigans.
Oh and another other thing...."suffer in ya jox!"
So the original house is still standing?
@@gavanmitchell9095 Sadly no, as I discovered today. It was knocked down and redeveloped....the tenants apparently hadn't treated it well. I checked in today when I was over clearing out my parent's house (bloody traumatic). The house with all the cars I thought was it is a few doors down.
@@professornuke7562 that really sucks but not that surprising unfortunately
Such a supportive father and husband!
As an 50yo Aussie I can relate to this movie so much. My parents/ familyare very much like this. Walking cliches, close and love to take the piss. Australia is this and so much more and I know after this you’ll want to visit. And if nothing else, The Castle "got you dreamin!”
I’m Australian and grew up in pretty much the same exact level of wealth as the family in this movie. It’s not about how shiny something is, but how much shine you’ve worn off it by living. Family is everything.
Regarding the accent, it's not the Melbourne accent - it's everywhere. Just the standard bogan accent, one of the strongest forms (but not the very strongest)
ABSOLUTE ICON AUSSIE 🇦🇺 FILM!!! THE BEST!!!😂😂😂
Rob Sitch and the Working Dog team's greatest work is the series Frontline, a behind the scenes comedy about a fictional evening current affairs show. If I had a pool room, it would go straight there. The perpetually broken photocopier was also a running gag in Frontline, where the repairman was often seen in the background working on it.
I haven't googled it, but wasn't The Games a working dog thing?
@@jeremykothe2847 The games was produced by Beyond International & ABC TV, created and written by Ross Stevenson and John Clarke RIP (of Clarke & Dawe). Same calibre of comedy.
@@leepalmer5821 cheers :)
Utopia, their recent one is along the same lines and just as scarily accurate and funny.
@@goodshipkaraboudjan can confirm
Describing The Castle as wholesome is so wholesome ❤
I remember this being in my mums VHS collection when I was a kid. heartwarming, I can appreciate it now.
This is quintessential Australiana! I love this film. There are many movies that show this, but this is the best of them.
I absolutely loved this movie. I watched it so many times growing up before I realised that when Dale said he dug another hole and it's filling with water, he accidentally hit a water main.
The Castle 🙌 pure genius writing and amazing acting..
Dale “I dug a hole” Kerrigan.
27 Years later I'll be fishing with friends or family, doesn't really matter where. In a quiet moment, someone always comes out with the line, "How's the serenity"
We pass through Bonnie Doon a couple of times a year on the way to visit relatives. Great spot to take break. There’s a restaurant at the rest stop which proudly serves the Serenity Burger.
Really enjoyed your reaction to this iconic Aussie Movie. It was actually filmed in 10 days by a production company called Working Dog. Everyone down here quotes this movie. “This is goin’ straight to the pool room”, “how’s the serenity”, “you are an ideas man”, “I think we can test it better”, “it’s the vibe”, “tell em they’re dreamin”, “now that is a head of hair”, “we’re goin’ to Bonnydoon”, “what do you know about lead?” and the list goes on.
Eric Bana actually started out as a comedian on Australian sketch comedy shows with the people who formed Working Dog called Full Frontal. Quite politically incorrect by today’s standards in afraid but hugely popular.
Anyway, here endeth the lesson, glad you enjoyed it. All the best
Australia as its best. Try Malcolm (1986). so many people dont know this movie exists but its brilliant. It has the same "VIBE" as the castle
Malcolm is my absolute favourite. 😊
Bonnie Doon is a town in Victoria Australia about 90mins NE of Melbourne, on the edge of Lake Eildon. Population is only a few hundred permanent residents but on weekends and holidays it becomes thousands who bring up their boats, jetskis, caravans, tents etc. Eildon finally has a decent amount of water in it after many years of drought that made boating on the lake pretty tough.
It's beautiful up there as well. I live in Morwell, a couple hours away from there and we used to go water skiing on weekends. This was the early 90's too.
I used to go to Eildon regularly when Mum and Dad lived there 70's to around 05. Dad was the Jerusalem Creek caravan & houseboat park manager before taking over the town center sports store. He retired in the late 1980's
Aka Bogan Heaven.
Thankyou for the great reaction, can't believe someone reacted to this .. aussie humor is a bit different and if you have watched Kath & Kim it's noice different unusual haha ...this is my fave aussie movie followed by Muriels Wedding and Malcolm .. we have many more but that is my top 3 ..some of the actors are well known in Australia 'Darryl' was 'Uncle Harry' in a 70's show The Sullivans... 'Sal' was 'Molly' in well loved aussie show A Country Practice and a couple other shows and 'Tracy' was a main character in Muriels Wedding and of course Eric Bana was in Chopper after the castle but was well known for being on a comedy show with the ladies that are Kath & Kim I guess a bit like your SNL .. Eric played a character called Poida (Peter). As you can tell we love this movie and the quotes from the movie are well used still today. fun fact for our family that when daryl first goes to see dennis he ties the dogs up outside the Brunswick Town Hall my hometown I went to High School in.
If you liked this, there is another very Aussie movie called Malcolm from 1986. Not as well known as The Castle, but is another comedy gem. Might not be a big hit for the channel though...
I rewatched Malcolm not long ago, it's still holds up surprisingly well. Lovely film.
Great film 💯
my top 3 The Castle Muriels Wedding and Malcolm .. fun fact lol ..drove past them filming the getaway bit at the end of the with the tram front I used to work in Preston and there was a small bridge for just the trams to go over the train line and they filmed there for around 3-4 days.
This and The Big Steal
I always thought Colin Friels would end up becoming a major star internationally. Glad he didn't. I think he's one of those humbler guys with serious acting chops and a social conscience.
What makes the movie great is the family is so loveable. And they see the best in people until they are given a reason to distrust them.
Growing up, my grandparents lived in the street where the this was filmed, and one of my best friends lived in the neighbour’s house, and her auntie and uncle lived at “the Kerrigans” 😂 the airport is really at the end of that street, Essendon Airport. It always gives me such a kick when non Aussies discover this little gem. My dad says “tell him he’s dreamin’” at least once a week
Genuinely the best Australian film ever, IMO. And that's saying something, IMO we have a really good and underrated film industry.
Muriel’s wedding? Sophie’s in that too!
oh yea, great movie
She's brilliant in Muriel's Wedding.
"I'm a bride, I'm BEAUTIFUL!"
I still use quotes from this. Our 5 year old neighbor was so excited to help us fix a fence. When her Dad came back I said "Olivia dug a hole."
If you liked this movie you should see the Australian comedies The Dish and Crackerjack which were created by the same team as The Castle. The Dish is about how instrumental the Parkes Radio Telescope located outside a small rural Australian town was to the Apollo 11 landing on the Moon while Cracerjack is about a small lawn bowling club fighting to not be taken over as a gambling venue. It's the vibe.
The Dish was created by the same team, but Crackerjack was not.
Crackerjack with beers at 1972 prices lol
I think the best line is, ''it's not a house, it's a home''. There is a difference.
The broken photo copier always gets me 😂
F3, what the fuxk is that😂
The whole team at 'Working Dog ' ,the production company that made this, have success after success in their history. Over 30 years of tv shows ( even a cartoon), movies, books ,radio shows. Not one dud. Currently 3 prime time tv shows . Have You Been Paying Attention?, The Cheap Seats and Thank God You're Here.
Legends.
Young Steve Curry, brilliant as 'The King' Graham Kennedy
Eric Bana, nuff said.
Bud Tingwell great ol fella was even younger in 'Summerfield' 1977 movie,
Omg.. I've forgotten how much this movie makes me smile and laugh
The house (Castle) was about a 5 minute drive from where I live. It's been moved elsewhere. I also spent a night in Bonnie Doon in the late 1970s. AND, I frequently go shopping very near Dennis Denuto's office. It was up for sale recently.
My favourite quote “Dad reckons powerlines are a constant reminder of man’s ability to generate electricity”
Loved the breakup of the movie. Most of the best items that have become local language. Tell him he's dreamin, the vibe, suffer in your jocks (which was missed in your clips) & many more. Has to be one of the best comedy movies ever coming from Australia. The Working Dog Production team were responsible for it. They also produced another brilliant comedy called The Dish which is a story about the landing on the moon of Apollo 11 which needed the satellite dish in Parkes New South Wales to maintain a connection to Apollo 11.
I LOVE The Castle - and yes I'm Aussie!
That was cool, I’m Australian so I’ll say you did a good job, didn’t miss much at all. Keep it up
LOVE THIS FILM my friends and family quote it every day ! Have done since it 1st came out . Thank you for reacting to it ❤
Thanks for a great reaction to an iconic film. Well done.
😊
truly one of the most important works to australians there will ever be
'You can't buy what I've got'
❤
Bud Tingwell was a legend on Australian TV (the QC) and all of the actors are huge Australian actors. The best part of the review "I knew they were from Melbourne because I've watched so much Kath and Kim" - you know your stuff Chrissie! Ha ha ha. Thank you for watching such an Aussie movie! Ps. The brother was in Pentridge jail, which is where Chopper served! Very Melbourne 😂😂😂
Australians are so understated, have a way of speaking that leaves lots of things unsaid. and lots of statements are voiced like questions. "How's the serenity" isn't a question, it's more of a statement, like 'This is good, I'm enjoying this'.
You get it
@@justice6480 Hope so, been living in Australia most of my life. Far from perfect, but generally well intentioned people. I'm far from perfect myself, who am I to complain?
Yes and ....
@@thewonkyembouchure I see what you did there. Nice!
There wouldn't be an Aussie who wouldn't know the references of 'Tell him he's dreamin', 'How's the serenity?', or 'It's the vibe'.
Tell em thier dreamin
I went to see this at the movies here in Oz when it came out with family and some friends, and never have I been, even all these years later, where the theatre was in a constant state of laughter. The scene where the dad walks out on the deck with his Ugg boots on got the whole theatre in stitches. Wonderful movie, an absolute classic and a great representation of Australia at the time; we all related.
If you wanna see a VERY heartbreaking but brilliant australian film, watch Angel Baby 1995, very underrated, it would have won oscars galore if it was a US made film I think
I really like your videos. This movie is still quoted to this day. It’s not uncommon to hear someone say on receiving something nice “this is going straight to the poolroom” or when you having difficulty explaining something “it’s Mabo, it’s the vibe”.
Wayne Hope the brother in jail writes heap of Aussie tv comedy with his wife Robyn Butler. The Librarians , Upper Middle Bogan, Very Small business. I think he has a hand in Kath and Kim also.
Upper Middle Bogan is brilliant.
Aussie classic. Extremely quotable too. This was always on rotation when the teacher was sick and they brought the VHS tapes out
Enjoyed seeing a non-Australian discover this. Interesting you mention Kath and Kim. While technically there’s not any crossover of major creatives between this and Kath and Kim, the people who did this were part of the same generation of comedians and there was a lot of crossover and interaction on projects along the way. And obviously there are distinct similarities jn the sort of person they are lovingly portraying (a variation on / subtype of the Australian bogan stereotype.)
Brilliant film iconic in Australia. Still quoted almost daily 20+ year's on! Especially Tell'm their dreaming and That's going straight to the pool room!
More hilarious Aussie comedies to watch are:
Crocodile Dundee
Priscilla: Queen of the Desert
Muriel's Wedding
Kenny
Gettin' Square starring David Wenham, Sam Worthington and Timothy Spall is for me, by far the funniest Australian movie ever. A little known gem of a movie, set in the Qld Gold Coast. There is a court-room scene that is absolutely side-splittingly freakin hilarious
Chrissie, dead set…you have the best damn laugh - it’s über infectious and endearing.
Love the fact you thought it was wholesome even though the language pushed the boundaries at times.
Keep it up. I am now officially a fan and subscriber.
Thank you! 😊
Holy crap Dale was so typical of the mid 80s. Its shocking how spot on this was. Sadly I think I heard the house in Melbourne this movie was filmed in was bulldozed a couple of years ago. End of an era. Lol Sunshine tech. Oddly that accent showcased in Melbourne is only still heard in pockets - it was quite common back in the day.
I thought the house had been moved and was for rent on air b&b a few years ago.
@@petrichor3947 it was the bonnydoon house that got moved and put on Airbnb
Yeah ... Pockets of Australians.
The house is in Beechworth. Very run down It was going to be used as the office of a Caravan Park. There is a Wooden statue of Darryl our the front with a woolen beanie and tell them their dreaming carved around the bottom. I have photoes of it.
Thank you so much girl for choosing this reaction. All of the jokes landed, and you caught them all. But yeah, this comment section here is an awesome read!!!
You do know that with the death of the Queen, all of the Queen’s Counsels (Q.C) became the King’s Counsels (K.C) in Australia. So today, in Australia, there is no Q.C.
Time they were all ACs* and drop the foreign monarchy altogether. ( Not air conditioning..)
Love that you are watching so much Aussie movies and TV. Muriel's Wedding is another you can add to your list, if you haven't already.
"Seaasoning" is always said in our house like in The Castle whenever we use any kind of herb or spice on any meal! haha
Goodonya Chrissie, Wolf Creek go on be a devil you'll love it !! Good special effects , ha ha ha !!😱
For god's sake don't, 3 times I have tried to watch it and can't get past the first 49 minutes...uncle fucking Mick... fuck right off
The interplay between mum and dad was so sweet. The actress who played mum - Anne Haddy - had a huge soap opera type role as Molly in A Country Practice back in the 80s. The episodes leading up to her death were a national tragedy.
"rob a gas station"...that was a very interesting choice of words for the film, as an Australian would never use this terminology. It would be service station (servo) or petrol station.
They replaced *a lot* of the dialogue for the US version. Whole thing was a little weird to watch. Sunshine TAFE became Sunshine Tech, rissoles became meat loaf, two stroke became diesel, camira became Corolla etc.
@@peter65zzfdfh ah, that explains a lot
Great to see you shining a light on Australian and New Zealand made movies 😊
Love the channel, keep up the amazing woman.
Hi there . Romper stomper next I recon if you have time 😊
I think you did an awesome job understanding the Australianisms. Glad you enjoy one of our classics…. that’s going straight to the pool room 😂
The entire production cost for the movie was only AU$30,000. Just goes to prove that a great story always wins. Tell Hollywood they’re bloody dreamin’.
And in 17 days too. Santo chose quality food service and a short shoot over a long shoot and cheap food.😂
Such a good natured, sweet hearted film. My favourite part 17:29 is Daryl and Lawrence discussing how proud they are of their children. Totally different socio-economic classes and it doesn’t matter one bit because there’s the common ground. I wish Australia really was like that.
To American sci-fi geeks, Anthony Simcoe is best known for playing D'Argo on the sci-fi adventure series, "Farscape".
Bonnie Down - a small Victorian town popular for water sports on Lake Eildon - when there's not a drought. It was originally a gold mining town but was eventually flooded (compulsorily acquired) to build Eildon Dam.