"Celia" follows the title character, a young girl growing up on the outskirts of 1950s Melbourne during the "Red Scare." After her beloved grandmother's death, Celia, prone to fantasies and possessing an extreme imagination, begins to imagine the tumultuous world around her as plagued by fairytale monsters, inadvertently leading her toward tragic events.
This little-seen fantasy horror film from Australia was largely missed by audiences when first released, though it is due for some reevaluation. Writer-director Ann Turner offers here a vivid portrait of childhood loneliness that illustrates the ways in which serious matters of the "adult" world (here, Turner focuses largely on political turmoil) impact the psyche of impressionable youth.
The lead character is brilliantly portrayed by the young Rebecca Smart, and the film is underpinned by strong performances from the entire cast. In some ways, it recalls the dreamy nightmare world of something like "Lemora" or "Valerie and Her Week of Wonders," and in others, functions as a precursor to Peter Jackson's "Heavenly Creatures"--though in this case, it is an even younger child whose loose grip on reality hurls her toward oblivion. Despite the serious implications and consequences at hand, the film still manages to retain some lightness to it that makes it highly watchable, and, though often been classified as a horror film, it really plays more like a dark fantasy with tinges of the macabre.
The one downfall is that the film's conclusion does feel slightly irresolute given the established gravity of the situation, but "Celia" remains a stolid, effective portrait of a child whose alienation from the world around her is drawn in a way that adults can empathize with. After all, we were all children once, right? 9/10.