Ricky Nasser is a young Australian whose peaceful suburban life turns into hell when sister Ameena, a slam poet, disappears without a trace.
Cast
Adam Bakri as Ricky Nasser
Rachael Blake as Joanne Hendricks
Rebecca Breeds as Sally McLeary - Nasser
Darina Al Joundi as Rana Nasser
Danielle Horvat as Ameena Nasser
Abby Aziz as Hanan Faour
Damian Hill as Shane
Russell Dykstra as Koustakidis
Reception
British Film Critic Victor Fraga of DMovies called it 'the film of the year' in his review of the premiere screening at the 2018 Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival. After the Australian premiere at the 2019 Sydney Film Festival, academic researcher Ingrid Matthews reviewed the film for the Australian Critical Race & Whiteness Studies blog, writing, "Slam is a devastating film. Devastatingly good, devastatingly sad, and devastatingly accurate in its portrayal of racism in Australia. The camera turns its gaze on two institutions in particular: the media; and law enforcement." Film Critic Christine Westwood wrote in Filmink"For all its tough subject matter, Slam is a gripping, entertaining mystery. You can’t turn away from it until the very end." The film had a limited theatrical release in Australia on 17 October 2019 and received many positive reviews. The Australian award-winning film critic David Stratton gave the film 4/5 stars in his video review 'David Stratton Recommends' and, in The Australian, stated "Slam is very impressive: it tells an important story in a convincing and enthralling way". The film critic Sandra Hall also gave it 4/5 stars in her review in the Sydney Morning Herald and The Age and said "'s a confident talent with a finely tuned instinct for the mechanics of plot and character. There's a lot going on in this film and although the conclusion it reaches is pretty predictable, the trajectory it takes is not." Jim Schembri, Journalist, critic, and author gave the film 3 1/2 Stars on 3AW and said "Without descending into hysterics writer/director Partho Sen-Gupta does a fine job detailing how promptly fear and suspicion can be coaxed used to promote an official agenda. It's a strong-minded, subdued film that bravely confronts the politics of grief." Film Critic Richard Kuipers in Variety called it "an outstanding slow-burn thriller" Guardian Australia film critic Luke Buckmaster named the film as one of 'The best Australian films of 2019' and wrote "Sen-Gupta doesn’t turn a blind eye to grim reality, nor does he prioritise verisimilitude over dramatically interesting storytelling."