Sweet As
Sweet As is a 2022 Australian coming-of-age drama film written and directed by First Nations filmmaker Jub Clerc in her feature directorial debut.[1][2] The story centers on 15-year-old Murra, an Indigenous girl facing personal turmoil, who accompanies her policeman uncle on a therapeutic "photo-safari" expedition for at-risk youth in Western Australia's Pilbara region, leading to experiences of growth, budding relationships, and confrontation with life's challenges.[1] Starring Shantae Barnes-Cowan as Murra and Mark Coles Smith as her uncle, alongside Tasma Walton and others, the film was produced by Liz Kearney and filmed on location in Port Hedland and surrounding areas.[1] Clerc's semi-autobiographical narrative draws from her own experiences, emphasizing themes of healing, cultural identity, and resilience among Indigenous youth in remote communities.[3] Premiering at the Melbourne International Film Festival, where it won the Blackmagic Design Australian Innovation Award, Sweet As also secured the NETPAC Award at the Toronto International Film Festival and the Crystal Bear in the Generation section at the Berlin International Film Festival, marking significant recognition for its fresh Indigenous perspective on youth and redemption.[4][5][6]Plot
Synopsis
In remote Pilbara country, Western Australia, 16-year-old Indigenous Australian girl Murra resides with her drug-addicted mother in a home marked by ongoing dysfunction.[7] Following an explosive domestic incident, Murra is abandoned by her mother and subsequently enrolled by her policeman uncle in a youth offender rehabilitation program.[8] [1] The program consists of a supervised road trip camp featuring a photography safari through the Pilbara outback, involving Murra and other troubled teenagers.[9] [10] Amid the journey, participants engage in photographic exercises that prompt Murra's initial encounters with the medium, alongside interpersonal tensions among the group and exposure to the expansive Australian landscape.[11] As the camp progresses, Murra navigates conflicts and begins to exhibit signs of personal development through her interactions and creative pursuits, leading to individual realizations by the trip's end.[12] [13]