The Year of Living Dangerously

    The Year of Living Dangerously
    1982

    Synopsis

    Australian journalist Guy Hamilton travels to Indonesia to cover civil strife in 1965. There—on the eve of an attempted coup—he befriends a Chinese Australian photographer with a deep connection to and vast knowledge of the Indonesian people, and also falls in love with a British national.

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    Cast

    • Mel GibsonGuy Hamilton
    • Sigourney WeaverJill Bryant
    • Linda HuntBilly Kwan
    • Michael MurphyPete Curtis
    • Bill KerrColonel Henderson
    • Noel FerrierWally O'Sullivan
    • Bembol RocoKumar
    • Paul SonkkilaKevin Condon
    • Domingo LandichoHartono
    • Kuh LedesmaTiger Lily

    Recommendations

    • 100

      Chicago Sun-Times

      The Year of Living Dangerously is a wonderfully complex film about personalities more than events, and we really share the feeling of living in that place, at that time.
    • 100

      Boston Globe

      The movie masterfully evokes, through stunning direction and magnificent performances, the heat and passion of desperate people living in desperate times. [18 Feb 1983]
    • 88

      TV Guide Magazine

      Ambitious, stylish, and ideologically confused, The Year of Living Dangerously falters in its attempts to succeed simultaneously as thriller, romance, and political tract, while also encompassing director Peter Weir's penchant for half-baked mysticism. Still, it's a gripping film.
    • 80

      Empire

      With its echoes of Graham Greene’s "The Quiet American," the script is inevitably preachy and Weir’s camera glowers over the injustices of President Sukarno’s failing regime in late 1965, but the performances are strong and the drama gripping.
    • 80

      Variety

      Here is an astonishing feat of acting by New Yorker Linda Hunt, cast by Weir because he could not locate a short male actor to fit the bill. A bizarre, yet touching, romantic triangle develops between Gibson, Hunt, and Sigourney Weaver as a British Embassy official.
    • 60

      The New York Times

      Peter Weir’s The Year of Living Dangerously is a good, romantic melodrama that suffers more than most good, romantic melodramas in not being much better than it is.
    • 60

      Time

      The plot becomes landlocked in true-life implausibilities; the characters rarely get a hold on the moviegoer's heart or lapels. What saves this meditation on the vestiges of colonialism is, ironically, its celebration of American star power.
    • 50

      The Globe and Mail (Toronto)

      The Year of Living Dangerously is chic, enigmatic, self-assured - and empty. [18 Feb 1983]

    Loved by

    • Mara