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9/10
Riveting political documentary covering Sydney mayoral campaign
Zane-1420 July 1999
This is a great documentary covering a mayoral election in suburban Sydney where the incumbant mayor, Larry Hand, is seeking re-election in an internal council election. Larry needs 7 of the 12 Councillors' votes and we watch him attempt every ruse available to gain the support of his fellow councillors. We get a fly on the wall view of political manouvering and backroom machinations as Larry cajoles, flatters and threatens his fellow councillors into voting for him. While there are some instances where people refused to be filmed negotiating with Larry, generally we are present at Larry's side throughout his campaign.

Although we get to see first hand the duplicitous nature of Larry, we still sympathise with him and hope he defeats the evil Labor Party candidate (filmed in a very negative light) and retain his mayoral robes for another term. Rats in the Ranks features twists and turns befitting a thriller and is a great example of realpolitik.

Highly recommendable.
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9/10
How lucky can you get?
Spleen20 December 1999
Anderson and Connolly filmed everything they could get their lenses on in the weeks leading up to a crucial Leichardt Council meeting. No doubt they were hoping for the occasional unguarded word to be caught on film - or perhaps a minor scandal might flit in front of the camera for a minute or two.

The result? Not only did they get all the juicy stuff they had hoped for, and more; they got a story so perfect and brilliantly proportioned that it could have been scripted - indeed, the `script' that resulted from Anderson and Connolly taking real events and snipping out the irrelevant bits is far more satisfying, clever and just plain entertaining than all but a handful of the scripts on which Hollywood is willing to squander millions of dollars. Anderson and Connolly's good fortune surpasses belief. I'm not saying they don't deserve this good fortune. But by gum, it IS good fortune. It's as if they'd planted a camera on the shores of Loch Ness just as the monster takes its first breath since 1450.

Their only problem must have been to fight the impulse to tap some of the councillors on the shoulder and tell them what some of the other councillors were planning to do. It's obvious they didn't, because ... oh, watch the film and find out.

P.S.: Having peeked behind the scenes, I have to say that I'd still be prepared to vote for Larry Hand (the mayor whose term is about to expire and may or may not be renewed). He's probably a decent enough mayor. Indeed, despite the unbelievable double-dealing that goes on, most of the councillors are almost innocent. The ones we DON'T see might be the Evil Politicians of popular fable, but the ones we do see really have no vices that weren't already present in the electorate, on election day.
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8/10
An honest account of Australian politics? I Hope not...
karLcx12 December 2001
If this wasn't a documentary, I would have to laugh and applaud the great casting and acting... and what a script! However, a documentary it is, and that is the saddest thing I have ever heard. I have never been gladder that I don't live in Sydney.
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10/10
A documentary with everything
tom.beer15 July 2003
I can only agree with other comments that this documentary is so perfect it might have been scripted. It has everything you could want in a drama right down to a suspenseful climax.

One thing that hasn't been highlighted is the battle that some council members have with their own conscience - watching them agonise between their consciences and their party loyalty is funny and painful at the same time.
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near perfection
ma_teng28 April 2002
A near perfect documentary that benefits immeasurably from the free-wheeling personality of Larry Hand and his cheeky asides to the off-screen filmmakers as he vies for yet another term as mayor of Leichhardt, an inner-west council in Sydney. For all of the dirty tricks and conspiring characters, it's the comedy that kept this viewer coming back many times to see it: councillor Trevor ruminating on the unimportance of it all, the get-together at the local swimming pool in celebration of council week, Hand leaking stories to the Sydney Morning Herald ("off the record"), and of course the outwitted Labor boys fuming upstairs in the council building while they await the never-to-arrive "rats" of the title. Every scene a gem.

This great film deserved much wider international release. Its absence on Oscar night in favour of US-oriented material was yet another weary example of how uninformed, onanistic and complacent the Academy can be.

R.I.P. co-director Robin Anderson (d. March 2002). Quiet Aussie legend.
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10/10
Best film about politics ever
daphne424224 August 2010
This film does for politics what Spinal; Tap did for rock music. Only difference is that this is a real documentary, not a mockumentary with scripted jokes. It has pretty much everything to recommend it. Some brilliant lines, some amazing twists in the events and a great ending. If everyone saw this film, politics would be far more popular. Larry Hand is the left-wing Mayor of Leichardt, a small township outside Sydney. Once a member of the Australian Labor Party (ALP), he was obviously expelled at some point but took that in his stride, saying "I've always felt you haven't really joined the ALP until you've been expelled from it." Now his term is up and it looks as if he won't be re-elected by the council as Labor runs a candidate against him. But he decides to fight to keep the job with a mix of charm and cheating. Absolutely compulsive whether or not you are interested in politics or Australia or neither.
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