In the midst of COVID lockdowns, Cate Blanchett called Warwick Thornton and said, "life is too short, I really want to make a movie with you".
The result is The New Boy, written and directed by award-winning filmmaker Thornton, which he began creating more than 18 years ago when he sat down to draft a script about a lone Indigenous boy who finds himself in a Christian monastery in 1940s Australia.
A story that pulls together moments from his own childhood where, as a young boy, Warrick's mother sent him away to a remote missionary-style boarding school run by Spanish monks.
Set in the middle of World War II, The New Boy begins when a young Indigenous boy (played by Aswan Reid, in his first film role) is captured by a horseback police patrol and hauled off to a remote monastery orphanage in the middle of the night.
The monastery is run by the fiery, and often unconventional, Sister Eileen (Blanchett), who, along with two Aboriginal staff – George (Wayne Blair) and Sister Mum (Deborah Mailman), keep the property's farm running while also caring for a small group of orphaned boys.
Sister Eileen has long been keeping the goings on at the monastery a secret from the prying eyes of the church but when the new boy arrives, with a unique set of gifts, everything she and this small chosen family know about spirituality and survival are called into question.
Watch the trailer for The New Boy here. Article continues after video.