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My Darling in Stirling review: Singing life’s mundane moments

The Bugle App

Lleyton Hughes

14 October 2024, 7:33 AM

My Darling in Stirling review: Singing life’s mundane momentsMy Darling in Stirling. Source: Bill Mousoulis.

Bill Mousoulis is an Australian indie film veteran with approximately 100 films credited to his name. Mousoulis first picked up a camera in 1982 and he hasn’t looked back since - also founding an online journal, a film group and a film website. 


His latest film, My Darling in Stirling, follows a young woman studying at university, quite bored with her life. When she falls in love with a charming young man from the picturesque town of Stirling in the Adelaide Hills, she finds herself enchanted by both him and the town itself. 


But there’s a twist: every line of dialogue in this film is sung.



“This film is really all about the form, the form of the musical,” says Mousoulis. “And there's something so strange about seeing ordinary people doing ordinary actions like asking each other to pass the coffee or the salt shaker and singing it,” 


Mousoulis draws inspiration from French director Jacques Demy’s groundbreaking 1964 musical The Umbrellas of Cherbourg, which also features entirely sung dialogue.


The Umbrellas of Cherbourg inspired my film; it’s like a local Australian version. Essentially, this musical is alternative in a few respects: there’s music throughout the entire film, with no breaks. And the other is that the film is set in a very ordinary world, so - the Adelaide suburbs and Adelaide City, and then branching out to the Adelaide country town of Stirling,” says Mousoulis.



Mousoulis says he had been living in Adelaide for a while when he found the small town called Stirling. He was drawn in by its beauty, its atmosphere and its people.


“Stirling has a certain flavour to it, because it's also a little bit alternative. A lot of artists live there and it's got the bookstores and cafes, as can be seen in my film,” says Mousoulis.


“It also has all these little laneways here and there, and a lot of trees and bushes and so, you don't know where anything is. Nothing looks plain and neatly laid out. It's a bit of a mix of things.”



In the film Stirling is presented as some sort of magical town that has everything that our main character was looking for. All of her worries and anxieties are fixed by this magical town and it reflects poetically on that first love you have as a young person.


But, of course, the town and the love she makes in the town come crashing down on her, which was always inevitable. Mousoulis says the film is about the idea of finding happiness and peace within.


“It’s about your inner feelings and resolving them and being strong within yourself and not letting a place or a person determine how you feel about yourself or how you feel about life, and this is the lesson that the young woman learns, basically,” says Mousoulis.



The film balances reality with a dreamlike quality, a result of its unique musical structure. Mousoulis believes this approach encourages viewers to perceive everyday life from a fresh perspective.


“The fun of the film and the excitement in the film is in its form, is that the music and the singing creates this strange thing on screen. And a lot of people have found the film a little strange. And a lot of people who are familiar with this kind of alternative form love the film,” says Mousoulis.


Bill Mousoulis. Source: ACMI

Ultimately, the film’s impact depends on the viewer's willingness to engage with its style. It might take time to adjust to what you’re seeing, but once you accept the film’s premise, you can easily become immersed in its world.


And if you are to look at Mousoulis’ long career it is clear he is not going to change who he and his films are to fit everybody’s different tastes and preferences. Mousoulis is an artist who is going to make things that he is passionate about even if they aren’t going to be universally adored.



“The important thing is to make the film you want to make, and make the artwork you want to make. I could be a different kind of person with a different set of cultural qualities to me, and maybe I'd be able to fit in and be more accepted,” says Mousoulis.


“But because what I'm doing is a bit more alternative and experimental, it means that I'm not quite part of that, and that's okay. We do these things for the love of doing them. And so I'm happy.”


My Darling in Stirling is playing at the Ritz Cinema in Randwick on Wednesday October 16 with a Q&A with Mousoulis himself. If you’re seeking a unique film experience, be sure to check it out.