Head On is a 1998 Australian LGBT-related romantic drama film directed by Ana Kokkinos, who wrote the screenplay with Andrew Bovell and Mira Robertson. The film is based on the 1995 novel Loaded by Christos Tsiolkas. The film stars Alex Dimitriades, Paul Capsis, Elena Mandalis and Damien Fotiou. The film tells the story of Ari (Dimitriades), a dissolute 19-year-old second generation Greek-Australian in Melbourne. Ari is caught between his conservative Greek background and modern Australia, amid his homosexual desire.

The film premiered in May 1998 at the Cannes Film Festival, three months ahead of its Australian premiere.

The film gained notoriety upon its release for its sexual explicitness, including a graphic masturbation scene performed by Dimitriades and numerous sex scenes. The film was a commercial success in Australia and received generally positive reviews from critics, with reviewers praising its stark realism, the lead performance by Dimitriades and the uncompromising subject matter.

Cast

  • Alex Dimitriades as Ari, a nineteen-year old from a working class Greek background. He is increasingly at odds with his parents and the conservative nature of his community. He engages in drugs and casual sex with men.
  • Paul Capsis as Johnny/Toula, Ari's cross-dressing, transgender friend. His mother has died and he faces constant battles with his conservative Greek father.
  • Elena Mandalis as Betty, sister of Ari's best friend, Joe. She, like Ari, also rails against her conservative Greek background and engages in drugs. She has partial sex with Ari.
  • Damien Fotiou as Joe, Ari's best friend. He is tired of Ari's excessive lifestyle. He is engaged to Dina as it makes the community and their families happy. They are rewarded with a deposit to buy a home together.
  • Eugenia Fragos as Sophia, Ari's long-suffering mother. She worries about her son's well-being and protects him from her husband's rage.
  • Julian Garner as Sean, the Anglo love interest of Ari. He is a university student that lives in a student house share with Ari's brother. He has an idealistic and liberal worldview that reflects his privilege.
  • Tony Nikolakopoulos as Dimitri, Ari's father. He is constantly at odds with Ari and wants him to find a job. He argues with his wife, blaming her for the way Ari is living his life.
  • María Mercedes as Tasia, Joe's mother. She reads Ari's tea leaves and sees Sean. She advises him: “Find a girl, get married, and then it doesn’t matter what you do.”
  • Alex Papps as Peter, Ari's older brother. He is a university student living with his girlfriend and Sean in a student house share.
  • Dora Kaskanis as Dina, Joe's fiancée. She is often at odds with Ari as he can see that her relationship with Joe is one of convention rather than love.
  • Vassili Zappa as Vassili, Johnny/Toula's conservative Greek father, he rejects his son's cross-dressing and is ashamed. He constantly berates his child.
  • Andrea Mandalis as Alex, Ari's younger sister. She conceals much of her partying from her parents, as well as her relationship with her Lebanese Australian boyfriend, Charlie.
  • Katerina Kotsonis as Ariadne, Sean's university friend and an intellectual, also from a Greek background. She challenges Ari's world view.
  • Neil Pigot as Senior Constable, an Anglo cop that is involved in the "bashing" of Ari and Johnny/Toula at the police station
  • Fonda Goniadis as Cop, a cop of Greek descent that takes out his frustrations on Johnny/Toula in a particularly vicious beating at the police station.
  • Costas Kilias as Taxi driver, a Turkish man he drives and converses with Ari and Johnny/Toula and they share humour about poor Greek Turkish relations. They take drugs together in the taxi and are stopped by the cops.
  • Wasim Sabra as Charlie, the Lebanese Australian boyfriend of Alex

Production

Casting

Several Greek Australian actors from Kokkinos' previous film, Only the Brave appear in this film. Elena Mandalis and Dora Kaskanis, protagonists of the previous film, again took on Greek Australian roles as Betty and Dina. Eugenia Fragos was also cast as the mother of Ari (Dimitriades). She had previously played Mrs Stefanou, mother of Vicki (Kaskanis) in Only the Brave. Elena Mandalis (Betty) and Andrea Mandalis (Alex) are real-life sisters.

Changes from the novel

The "bashing" scene at the police station, where Ari and Toula are assaulted by cops, was written for the film and does not come from the novel. Such incidents were not uncommon at the time in Australia. Kokkinos hired a cop for the rehearsals period and asked if the scene was overblown, he responded “No. Quite the contrary.”

It returned to the Melbourne International Film Festival for a special screening at the 2022 festival.

It also had theatrical distribution in fifteen countries outside Australia, and secured a limited theatrical release in the United States. Film critics Margaret Pomeranz and David Stratton both gave the film 4.5 out of 5 stars on SBS. Stratton also published a review inVariety praising Dimitriades for his "fine, brave work", adding "Onscreen in virtually every scene, the young thesp utterly convinces as a reckless, hedonistic seeker of instant gratification."

The film critic, Paul Byrnes wrote about the film's importance for the National Film and Sound Archive: "In terms of iconoclastic daring, Head On has no equal in Australian cinema...Head On is not just about the state of denial within the Greek community in Melbourne. It’s a bomb aimed at the placid and polite styles of Australian film." Byrnes concluded "It is more like a Scorsese film, a descent into a form of hell, in which the main character must battle his demons or die. The extraordinary finale, in which Ari dances on the docks where so many migrant families arrived on Australian soil, coupled with a narration that remains defiant and unapologetic, is one of the most beautiful and enigmatic endings of any Australian film."

Head On divided the Greek community in Australia, Kokkinos said in an interview with the Los Angeles Times. Kokkinos said "what it did is that it opened up a dialogue between younger Greeks and their parents. What the film has done is that it has broken down barriers."

The film received a retrospective review in The Guardian in 2014: "Head On is social realism crossed with a nightmare; kitchen sink drama that enters the realm of the senses...But viewed as a slow-burning portrait of an extended nightmare – of a coming of age gone brutally wrong – the film is painfully brilliant."

Accolades

1998 Australian Film Institute Awards

  • Best Editing - Jill Bilcock (won)

And 8 nominations:

  • Best Film
  • Best Direction - Ana Kokkinos
  • Best Actor - Alex Dimitriades
  • Best Adapted Screenplay - Andrew Bovell, Ana Kokkinos and Mira Robertson
  • Best Supporting Actor - Paul Capsis
  • Best Costume Design - Anna Borghesi (nominated)
  • Best Original Score - Ollie Olsen
  • Best Sound - Lloyd Carrick, Roger Savage, Craig Carter, Livia Ruzic

L.A. Outfest

  • Grand Jury Award: Outstanding Foreign Narrative Feature (Ana Kokkinos, won)

San Francisco International Lesbian & Gay Film Festival

  • Best First Feature (Ana Kokkinos, won)

Soundtrack

The soundtrack includes mostly Australian, British and Greek musical artists and composers: Death in Vegas, Lunatic Calm, Way Out West, The Saints, Underground Lovers, Dannii Minogue, Isaac Hayes, Silverchair, Primal Scream, The Visitors, Hot Chocolate, The Habibis, and Manos Loïzos.