Word: outback
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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They slog through the outback for a few days, where she learns how to hypnotize animals, twist the heads off snakes and avoid those terrifying crocodiles lurking in every innocent-looking lake. The film is dotted with humorous scenes, including a laugh-out-loud encounter with a modern aborigine...
...Susan, which becomes predictably romantic as he snatches her out of the jaws of--you guessed it--a giant crocodile. She is intrigued by his indifference to the problems of the world, and, after two days, she has acquired an appreciation for the basic, natural life of the outback, as well as an unlikely boyfriend...
...film leaves Australia for the wilds of New York, where Susan has brought Mick for a visit. She shows him the best the city has to offer: cabbies, muggings, pimps and pretentious Italian restaurants, and he approaches every new experince with optimism, humor and clever tricks from the outback...
Anyone who has seen a Mel Gibson movie can identify an Australian accent, but the band's obvious Outback origins made little impression on the dance-oriented audience. "Where in England are you from?" an awestruck female fan asked Faulkner after the concert...
Roberts finally concludes that the entirety of Australian Coke's problem lies in the small outback hamlet of Anderson Valley, where old fashioned operator T. George McDowell (Bill Kerr) has carved out his own soft-drink niche. What ensues is a war for the American way, with men in Santa Claus suits (what does this mean?) trying to market Coke at a Rotary social, and fleets of big red trucks pouring into the valley in the name of free trade...