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Cinema, also released 8/11/12

THE SAPPHIRES (PG)

BASED on Tony Briggs’s 2004 stage play, The Sapphires is a crowd-pleasing, feel-good comedy about four sisters who discovered their voices while entertaining troops in Vietnam.

Director Wayne Blair applies a light touch to some potentially thorny subject matter – the enduring pain of a stolen generation of Aboriginal children forcibly taken from their parents, the devastation of the war on the indigenous population – but like the sibling’s songbook, his film remains upbeat.

Twenty-three-year-old singer Jessica Mauboy, a runner-up on the Australian version of The X Factor, is luminous in her big screen debut, delivering a strong performance as well as the powerhouse vocals.

She swings soulfully through a soundtrack that includes What A Man, I Heard It Through The Grapevine and I Can’t Help Myself (Sugar Pie Honey Bunch).

Glorious.

Blair’s film opens in 1958 with young girls running excitedly to an Aboriginal mission, where their joyful singing is cut short by the arrival of the authorities.

Several girls are taken away, to be assimilated into white families.

Ten years later, booze-sodden Irish talent scout Dave (Chris O’Dowd) discovers Gail McCrae (Deborah Mailman) and her sisters Cynthia (Miranda Tapsell) and Julie (Jessica Mauboy) singing in a pub talent contest.

The audience refuses to acknowledge their superb efforts and when Dave dares to speak up in favour of the McCraes, he’s shot down in flames by the pub landlady.

Ambitious 17-year-old Julie persuades Dave to put them forward for auditions to entertain the troops behind enemy lines.

Dave eventually agrees and stresses that he needs to make changes to the line-up, such as promoting Julie over Gail as the group’s front woman.

“How do you feel about not singing lead?” he asks the fiery-tempered oldest sister.

“How do you feel about being knocked out by a woman,” Gail retorts.

Dave persuades the girls to recruit their estranged cousin Kay (Shari Sebbens) and renames the group The Sapphires.

He ditches the girl’s country repertoire and turns them on to soul music, which impresses Army brass.

“We’ll see you in Saigon,” confirms the audition panel.

The Sapphires go down a storm overseas and man-eater Cynthia catches the eye of soldier Robby (Tory Kittles) but dreams of stardom are tempered by the harsh reality of the horrors of war on both sides of the conflict.

The Sapphires sing to a similar tune as The Commitments, albeit with sequins, swinging hips and bone-dry Antipodean humour.

Battle scenes, though brief, are well-orchestrated despite obvious budget limitations and we genuinely fear for the characters when they are literally caught in the crossfire.

O’Dowd gleefully pickpockets many of the best lines and he shares wonderful screen chemistry with Mailman, playing the mother hen, who will do anything to protect her sisters from harm.

G’day Vietnam!

STAR RATING: ***

HERE COMES THE BOOM (12A)

A MILD-MANNERED biology teacher lays his body on the line for his students in Frank Coraci’s comedy. Scott Voss (Kevin James) teaches science at Wilkinson High School, which is weathering severe budget cutbacks in the face of falling grades. The school’s music programme, run by Marty (Henry Winkler), is under threat, which would mean terminating the beloved teacher’s contract. Determined to help his colleague and retain a subject that the students love, Scott resolves to raise the $48,000 budget shortfall by taking on extra jobs outside of the classroom. Niko (Bas Rutten), one of the students at a citizenship class which Scott teaches, introduces him to the lucrative world of mixed martial arts fighting. It transpires that the losing fighter in a bout takes home a purse of 10,000 dollars. Scott, who was a collegiate wrestler, finds the perfect way to save the music programme from closure, presuming his 42-year-old body doesn’t crumble under the barrage of kicks and punches.

STAR RATING: ***

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