To Many Weapons
KIDS KILLING KIDS
a play about plays and the
Piony people
Presented by MKA and Q
Theatre Company
in Association with Melbourne
Fringe Festival and Crack Theatre Festival
Directed by Bridget Balodis
Designed by Melanie Koomen
Photography by Sarah Walker
Devised, written and
performed by
David Finnigan
Georgie McAuley
Jordan Prosser
Sam Burns-Warr
Fringe Hub – the Warehouse
9pm – till 3 October
Newcastle – 5 October
Penrith – Q Theatre – 17, 18,
19 October 2013
Kids Killing Kids is one out of the bag and not to be missed due to questions of ethics
and Theatre Making it broaches, particularly in regard to unwitting
appropriation. This work sits right on a
cultural pulse, albeit, seemingly, inadvertently. Hey sometimes, creative choices have a
strange way of emerging from the ether, don’t they?
Four young vibrant, energetic
Theatre Makers divulge an engrossing and thought provoking tag team
presentation about their experiences conceptualizing and then assisting in the
crafting of a piece of Theatre, Battalia
Royale with the Sipat Lawin Ensemble in Manila. This work is predominately about the
unexpected outcomes.
The live sight specific piece
created was modeled on a Japanese film Battle
Royale (2000) that cries comparison with Hunger Games in that it is about the enforced annihilation of a
group of young people by each other.
Naïve, yet well intentioned,
there can be no doubt that all four Theatre Makers experienced the foray into
an exotic county to craft theatre as a ‘baptism by fire’. They didn’t know that they were working with
a powder keg until the production got underway and attracted huge audiences and
became ‘a social media phenomena’.
Some things seem to go
unexplained or unaddressed in this Fringe show. For example why the writers did not make it
to Manila to catch initial performances but only managed to witness the last night
with its numerous actor casualties. Nevertheless
heaps of raw and smarting truth is addressed.
Fascinatingly it would seem
that Battalia Royale twisted
performance back towards ritual enactment, engaged wholeheartedly with the
audience, and in turn, rendered the performers vulnerable to the passion their
enactment provoked, from their audiences.
The playing of a violent game melds into an overpowering release and
scoops up fervor in its wake.
This doco/drama presentation
reminds us that Theatre is rooted in ritual and the incredible power the medium
of Theatre can actually hold - but seldom elicits - certainly in the West.
Four and a half stars. And where did the other half a star go? Well
I think I am just being picky because not on concept, content, courage or
direction - but on vocal presentation.
Suzanne Sandow
(For Stage Whispers)
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