307 words, 2 minutes read time
The Castle (1997) is a warm and funny Australian film about the Kerrigan family, who fight to keep their home when the government tries to take it.
“It’s not just a house. It’s a home.” That line hits like a punch to the neck of globalism.
The Castle isn’t just a comedy— it’s a Trojan horse packed with dynamite. Beneath the warm flannelette and tobacco scented charm of the Kerrigan clan lies a story of defiance: working-class Aussies standing their ground against the cold machinery of corporate expansion and foreign-controlled infrastructure. A backyard rebellion against the parasite class.
Made on a shoestring budget by true believers, rather than market-worshipping careerists, the film channels a deeper truth: that real Australia—the one with backyard rotisseries, utes, and mum’s sponge cake—is not for sale. Not to the airport. Not to the multinationals. Not to HR department bureaucrats with imported MBAs and no dirt under their fingernails.
Darryl Kerrigan, with his dogs, tarps, and bottomless decency, is the great unwashed answer to the slick technocrats selling off the country chunk by chunk. His fight for his home becomes a proxy war for national sovereignty. The High Court might call it constitutional law; we call it bloody well standing up for your own.
In an era when so much Australian cinema is obsessed with mimicking American angst, The Castle flies the Eureka flag with a laugh and a lawnmower. It doesn’t care about global markets or Cannes prestige. It cares about mateship, land, and dignity. Things Australia used to stand for before, it was told to sit down and sell out.
Forget the arthouse wank. If you want a film that captures Australia’s soul—its embattled, underdog, salt-of-the-earth soul—this is it.
Verdict: The Castle isn’t just a film. It’s a blueprint for a quiet revolution.
By David Ironside
Picture credit: Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=5716619
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