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ROLL: COMEDY/SUSPENSE
50 minute TV MOVIE
INVESTMENT:
SBS Australia, Showtime, Screenwest. Shooting: 2003
WRITER:
Dave Warner
PRODUCER:
Angie Smith, Soul
Films
DIRECTOR:
Martin Wilson (WAIT TILL FATHER GETS HOME)
LOGLINE:
One crazy night together forever changes the lives of two very
different cousins.
SYNOPSIS:
Mat, an innocent young country boy and gifted footballer, is coming
to the city to try out before all the AFL talent scouts. The plan
is for him to spend a quiet night with his relatives before the
big day but this all goes awry when George, his city-slicker cousin
fails to meet his train. The reason for George's tardiness is
that he has been requested by loan-shark Tiny Veneto to do a cash-for-xtc
swap on the other side of town. George isn't a bad guy at all
but in pursuing his dreams for a sportsbar-cum-menswear shop he
has gotten in over his head with the sociopathic Tiny.
Tiny is unaware
he has been targeted by a police operation and his current flame,
Ginger, is in fact an undercover police operative working in association
with two cops, Dave and Alex who have earmarked this night as
the night Tiny and his drug supplier, The Moroccan, go down. When
George doesn't show at the station, Mat accepts a lift from Jesse,
a pretty female biker. Jesse promptly rips him off, taking with
her the pair of footy boots without which Mat feels he will fail
to impress the scouts. Eventually he does link up with George
but he is mortified by his cousin's brash ways and when George
borrows his money to "shout" them bit a visit to a brothel, Mat
kicks up and runs off into the night. He is soon running for his
life from a gang and only George's timely intervention saves him
from being a human kebab. The cousins have a rapprochement of
sorts and when Mat happens upon a contrite Jesse who informs the
boys she has returned the footy boots to the train station, it
seems that all will end well. Before they know it though, Jesse
has made off with George's car and the bag containing Tiny's money.
George is staring into the bottom of a very deep well. It seems
he has no alternative but to report back to Tiny and throw himself
on Tiny's non-existent mercy. It's not just George who is shattered
by the turn of events.
Without the
cash linked to Tiny, the cops' long planned sting has also turned
to mud. Jesse though, has a conscience. She was only stealing
the money for a drug-addict Dad and deep down she knows that giving
him this money will do more harm than good. She takes the money
back to Mat and together they reclaim George just before he is
about to lose his virginity and possibly, if Tiny has anything
to with it, his balls. The three of them head off to the rendezvous,
the cops, and Tiny and his crew, in pursuit. For the cops it's
no longer just a question of busting Tiny but avoiding bloodshed
as Ginger has discovered that the only reason George was chosen
for the courier role is because The Moroccan aims to settle a
blood feud with Tiny at the courier's expense. Of course Jesse
and the cousins are unaware of this and they feel well pleased
with themselves when they dupe the cops into chasing George while
Jesse and Mat go onto the meet.
But then George
learns the awful truth - in attempting to save his own arse, he
has placed Mat in real danger. This finally provides George with
the impetus he needs to change his ways, for once choosing the
hard but proper path, instead of the easy but wrong one. It's
a hectic climax as George seeks to redeem himself under the swishing
blade of The Moroccan while the paths of the cops and Tiny finally
collide. And as for Mat, he will have to demonstrate his foot
skills under more pressure than he'd find in any scouting camp.
ROLL
is a story about fathers and sons, sons and daughters, husbands
and wives brothers and brothers, sisters and brothers and cousins
and cousins. ROLL is a funny, suspenseful, express-train
of a tale in which a foolish but ultimately decent young hoon
gets his life back on track, mends his relationship with his Dad
and inadvertently helps Australia qualify for the next World Cup.
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