"Jindabyne" directed by Ray Lawrence
A group of men on a fishing trip makes the morally questionable decision to delay reporting the discovery of a murdered woman's body. Claire, the wife of one of the men, tries to understand the reasoning behind such thoughtlessness.
"Jindabyne," a serious and somber film from Australia starring Laura Linney and Gabriel Byrne, is as slow getting started as a leisurely weekend fishing trip, but it ends up having an almost unbearable impact. Nominated for nine Australian Film Institute awards, including best picture. - Kenneth Turan LA Times review of Jindabyne
Based on the short story "So Much Water So Close to Home" by Raymond Carver.
Release Date: April 2007
Run Time: 2 hr. 3 min.
Rating: R
Cast: Laura Linney, Gabriel Byrne, Deborrah-Lee Furness, John Howard, Leah Purcell
Director: Ray Lawrence
Genre: Psychological Drama, Drama
Run Time: 2 hr. 3 min.
Rating: R
Cast: Laura Linney, Gabriel Byrne, Deborrah-Lee Furness, John Howard, Leah Purcell
Director: Ray Lawrence
Genre: Psychological Drama, Drama

Jackie (Kate Dickie) spends her days monitoring a series of surveillance cameras trained on a rough Glasgow neighborhood. She spots Clyde (Tony Curran), an ex-convict, on one of her screens and quickly becomes obsessed with him. She devises a plan to meet and seduce him, and the reason for her obsession soon becomes clear.
In the early 1970s, author Clifford Irving (Richard Gere), with accomplice Richard Suskind (Alfred Molina), attempts to pull off one of the greatest media scams of the century. He writes a fake biography of reclusive billionaire Howard Hughes, claiming that Hughes commissioned it, and sells the book to publishing giant McGraw-Hill. Based on a true story.









