The Incredible Journey of Mary Bryant
The Incredible Journey of Mary Bryant
| 30 October 2005 (USA)
The Incredible Journey of Mary Bryant Trailers

A young woman is transported to the New South Wales penal colony in 1788.

Reviews
2hotFeature one of my absolute favorites!
Tedfoldol everything you have heard about this movie is true.
Dynamixor The performances transcend the film's tropes, grounding it in characters that feel more complete than this subgenre often produces.
Taraparain Tells a fascinating and unsettling true story, and does so well, without pretending to have all the answers.
henrypat6 The Incredible Journey of Mary Bryant is a period piece mini-series that is unlike most period pieces you'll see. Most period dramas are romantic and glossy, or they are gothic and dark, or they are whimsical and fun. This one is just gritty and real. It's loosely based on the life of Mary Bryant and British girl convicted of theft who's sent to the Australian Penal Colony. It's disturbing, interesting,and well-acted (Romola Garai is fantastic as usual).
weezeralfalfa This made for Australian TV miniseries provides a horrifying look at the conditions many of Britain's poor and prisoners had to endure. I wish more time had been spent on their incredible voyage in a small open boat from the Australian penal colony on Botany Bay to Dutch- controlled Timor, several thousand miles away. How did they avoid being wrecked on The Great Barrier Reef? Seems like most of the time, they were on the verge of starvation. Mary was starving in her native Cornwall, because the fish her father usually caught didn't show up for at least 2 years in a row, so she stole to eat. She starved in prison and on the prison ship to Australia. She starved in the penal colony because the crops failed for several years in a row. She mostly starved on the voyage to Timor and, I'm sure on the return trip to England. About the only time she wasn't starving is when Lt. Clarke was subsidizing her, and during her stay in Timor, when the elite inexplicably lavished food, drink and clothes on the escapees, whom they thought were victims of a sunken ship. Yet, she and her children didn't appear to be any the worse for starvation, we must recognize. A number of fictional details are included. Most of them relate to the fictional character Lt. Clarke. Although there was a Lt. Clark on the voyage, his relationship with Mary is fictional. Some reviewers think that this character should not have been introduced, unnecessarily complicating things. I believe he was a useful character in most of Part 1 of the film as seen on my DVD, until the escapees make off with Governor Phillips cutter. He helps to explain how Mary and her children escaped starvation at times, and how they obtained the key to the stores house. He also provides a romantic dalliance for Mary . After that, his relationship with the escapees is largely implausible or distorts history. Supposedly, he leads some soldiers in a chase after the stolen cutter, along the shore. But, apparently he has no horses to speed his passage through territory perhaps unexplored and populated by hostile natives. To walk on the beaches invited heat exhaustion in their full soldier regalia. It's implausible that he could have caught up with the escapees, as dramatized. Later, when Clarke takes a ship back to England, the ship makes (an implausible?) stop at Dutch Timor. Clarke hoped to discover whether the escapees made it to Timor and, if so, hoped to recapture them for trial in England. However, as several reviewers have pointed out, Dutch authorities wouldn't likely grand him the favor of allowing some redcoats to go exploring in the bush for Mary. Rather, if the English had informed the Dutch of their true nature, the Dutch authorities might then have arranged for their departure in custody westward. Also, while on Timor, according to the film, the red coats assassinated Mary's husband, Will, who actually died of 'fever'(likely Malaria or Dengue) on the voyage to England. Clarke had a golden opportunity to kill Mary in private, but held back.Although the depiction of men and women inmates being housed together in large rooms at Newgate Prison in correct, the sexes were separated on different ships on the voyage. However, the women could and often did form clandestine relationships with the crew and guards.I watched the R version of the film, which is divided into Parts 1 and II. This version includes several scenes of simulated sexual intercourse and the 'rape fest' scene in the open at the colony, as well as a flogging of a woman, and a hanging.It would have been nice to finish with Mary reuniting with her family(if they still existed), instead of walking through a meadow toward Cornwall. Perhaps it was left as such in anticipation of another sequel? Apparently, nothing is known of her, after the trial, so this would have involved inventing a completely fictional story.On the whole, the film accomplishes its purpose of portraying the horrible conditions of the poor and imprisoned, and some of the difficulties involved in establishing the first British settlement on Australia. As several have noted, less time spent in facial close ups would have been beneficial. Romola Garai was good in her role as Mary, eliciting both sympathy for her plight, and revulsion at some of her methods to try to avoid starvation for her and her children.My review title comes from a comment by Governor Phillips about the escapees, and their chance of surviving their perilous journey.
SimonJack Even though two books had been written about her, Mary Bryant probably was little known outside of British and Australian historians or seafaring buffs before this mini-series was produced for TV. At first, I thought this might be a female version of "Les Misérables." But, this film is about a real person – not based on a novel of fiction. Yet, for a biopic it strays way too far from the facts and real story. Nor, does it have a true hero in the sense of Victor Hugo's Jean Valjean in "Les Misérables." "Mary Bryant" is very loosely based on the events of a short period in the life of Mary Broad Bryant. It could have been a great movie about a true event in history. The elements were all there — the harsh British penal laws, typical of most European laws of the time; the establishment of Australia as a British penal colony; a head-strong woman's instinct for her survival and that of her children; a convict's desire for freedom; a daring prison escape by way of an incredible sea voyage; and the pardon and freedom of prisoners. Instead, this film reduces all that to sentimentalism (a poor starving girl arrested for stealing a picnic lunch, which is false), exaggerated heroism, fictitious people and relations, and much sex. Mary Broad was a real person. She was a highway woman and petty thief in Plymouth, England. She was among the first English criminals sentenced to the new penal colony at Botany Bay – present-day Sydney, Australia. There, she married another prisoner, William Bryant. She did help lead an escape that took a small group of prisoners and her two children more than 3,000 miles over sea. But, much of the rest of this story – and more than 75 percent of the film, is devoted to a fictitious romance with a British officer, high living by the prisoners on Dutch Timor, and a fictitious pursuit on TimorThis two-part movie suffers in some technical areas as well, and in the script and direction. Some other reviewers found the same difficulty with the film that I did. The large number of close-ups were very disconcerting. The full-face and full-screen shots and scenes repeated so often and seemed to last so long. Maybe the filmmakers didn't consider that audiences would be watching this on much larger home TV screens. The faces were hugely overblown and frequent distractions from the film. For all the time spent on the ship from England to Australia, the movie gave so little time to the daring escape and sea journey in a small boat. Yet that 66-day, 3,000-plus mile journey was the incredible event for which Bryant became known. A huge part of the film was Bryant's romantic or feigned romantic relationship with Lt. Clarke. His character was totally fictitious. The film has Clarke and British marines hunting down Bryant on Timor, a Dutch possession. At least one other reviewer noted the absurdity of British troops operating in another country's territory. Finally, the idea that the prisoners, none of whom were refined or educated, could have pulled off a ruse by making the Dutch officials think they were landed gentry or merchant survivors from a ship wreck is hilariously absurd. In reality, the Dutch weren't fooled. They sent Mary and her group to England as suspected escapees, for international relations.The filmmakers apparently didn't need history advisers or editors for this film – or they didn't care if the film was judged absurd on these points. I'm willing to allow "Hollywood" license to filmmakers for fictitious elements of most films, especially those based on fiction and novels. But, biopics are another matter. By their very definition, these should be as close to accurate representations of people and events as records provide. I think an accurate historical biopic of Mary Bryant could have been done in one full-length film. It would show her as a petty thief and highway woman who gets caught in Plymouth, England, and sentenced to the new penal colony. It would show the harsh conditions aboard ship, without the romance of the fictitious British officer. It would show the struggles in the penal colony, and Mary's marriage and her care for her two children. It would show the plans for escape and the actual flight. Finally, it would show her return to England, the long time for the trial, lawyer and writer James Boswell's defense, and her pardon and regained freedom. Still, one would be left to wonder about her fate. As in the end of the movie, since there apparently is no other record of what happened to such a famous or notorious person after that.The unfortunate thing about films like this is that many viewers, who don't bother to check further, go away with sentimental notions based on stories that are not true. Thus, we get false history that deceives our culture and inherent drive for truth and justice. This movie is interesting, some of the cinematography is very good, and the acting is good, but not great. For these medium qualities, with its inaccuracy, significant fictional alterations, and clearly absurd scenes, I can rate it only a 5.
jaimywds Mary Bryant was a simply brilliant portrayal of a young woman's strength, vitality, courage and determination. The story encapsulated her desires for love and lust in a new world of discoveries and unforgiving hardships. From a historical perspective I felt I was there, a truly realistic picture of English on foreign soil, bringing their flag of imperialism progressivist ideals, and ethnocentricities. Going back in time the story revealed the capacities of the unrelentless human spirit, pushing the boundaries in both mind and body. Being a young woman myself the character of Mary Bryant truly inspired me, as I thought I have endured hardships. This realistic account of a woman's tale lived 200 years ago discloses how spoilt our lifestyle has become. I am a patriotic Australian and very proud of the blood sweat and tears of our forefathers that made this country. I have placed the movie in my top three movies of all time. The script and the actors were fantastic.
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