Emerald City (film)
Emerald City | |
---|---|
Directed by | Michael Jenkins |
Produced by | Joan Long |
Written by | David Williamson |
Based on | play by David Williamson |
Starring |
John Hargreaves Robyn Nevin Nicole Kidman |
Music by | Chris Neal |
Cinematography | Paul Murphy |
Edited by | Neil Thumpston |
Release dates |
1988 (Australia) 9 February 1992 (USA) |
Running time | 93 min. |
Country | Australia |
Language | English |
Budget | A$2,831,738[1] |
Box office | AU $192,831[2] |
Emerald City is a 1988 film directed by Michael Jenkins, an adaptation of the play of the same name. Much of the play's dialogue is retained, though discussion of off-stage characters is usually replaced with their appearance and a more conventionally cinematic level and speed of dialogue. Also, the younger daughter Hannah was omitted.
Cast
- Colin: John Hargreaves
- Kate: Robyn Nevin
- Mike: Chris Haywood
- Helen: Nicole Kidman
- Elaine: Ruth Cracknell
- Malcolm: Dennis Miller
- Penny: Ella Scott
- Sam: Haydon Samuels
- Ian: Nicholas Hammond
- Kath: Michelle Torres
Production
Film rights to the play were bought by Joan Long whose first choice to direct was Bruce Beresford. However he had just filmed an adaptation of the play Crimes of the Heart and did not want to do another play adaptation so Mike Jenkins was hired instead. According to some accounts, the original draft of the script pared down the dialogue but John Hargreaves and Robyn Nevin insisted it be put back during rehearsals. Michael Jenkins decided to go along with the actors but had them speak the dialogue especially fast.[3] Jenkins:
We sat down with the piece when it was in script form and we thought, `This is not going to survive if we approach it too politely', so... we decided we would do it as we did - we were a bit inspired by some of the Cary Grant movies of the '40s when they talked so quickly. So we thought we would pursue that line and feed the information to an audience at a fairly fast rate so that it keeps happening for them. There were mixed critiques. We had some friends and some foes. Those that loved it loved it - those that hated it were very angry about how fast we spoke.[4]
Reception
The Australian Film Institute nominated it for five awards: Best Actor (John Hargreaves), Best Achievement in Cinematography (Paul Murphy), Best Adapted Screenplay (David Williamson), Best Actress in a Supporting Role (Nicole Kidman), and Best Actor in a Supporting Role (Chris Haywood), for which it won.
Williamson enjoyed the adaptation saying it "had a lot of raw energy".[5]
The film has never been released on home video in the United States, though it has been shown on the cable channel Romance Classics. A region-free PAL DVD was released in the United Kingdom by an anomnymous company in Herts (VFC31962 NL041; UPC: 5 017633 41002 >) sometimes given online as "Hollywood Classics". This edition was pressed with a ten-second jump in the master early in the film. Although this jump is noted in the counter, it happens in exactly the same place on all copies.
Possible inspirations
Williamson and Denis Whitburn worked on a World War II miniseries with director Chris Thomson titled The Last Bastion, which ran on Network Ten. The running time was 360 minutes. (Academy Home Entertainment released a version that ran only 160 minutes to U.S. home video). The miniseries was much ballyhooed but was not well rated. Also, Williamson assisted his brother-in-law, Chris Löfvén, on Oz, an Australian rock musical film that retold The Wizard of Oz (1939 film) on the streets of Melbourne. The fictional Land of Oz rarely comes up in Australian conversation; the term is used almost exclusively as the nickname for one's own country.
The title of the play 'Emerald City' has been used as a frequent moniker and nickname for the city of Sydney ever since the play was first presented. The title has been attributed to Brett Sheehy who was Sydney Theatre Company's Literary Manager when the play was written and first produced. The play's director Richard Wherrett recalls in his autobiography The Floor of Heaven that Sheehy suggested Emerald City as the title, which Williamson accepted, adding the line of dialogue, "The Emerald City of Oz. Everyone comes here along their yellow brick roads looking for the answers to their problems and all they find are the demons within themselves."[6]
References
- ↑ "Production Survey", Cinema Papers, September 1987 p66
- ↑ "Australian Films at the Australian Box Office", Film Victoria accessed 24 October 2009
- ↑ David Stratton, The Avocado Plantation: Boom and Bust in the Australian Film Industry, Pan MacMillan, 1990 p192-193
- ↑ Interview with Mike Jenkins, 25 March 1996 accessed 19 October 2012
- ↑ Greg Gallaghan, "10 questions - David Williamson", The Australian 18 December 2010 accessed 5 April 2014
- ↑ Wherrett, Richard (2000) The Floor of Heaven, Hodder Headline, Sydney, p.213.
External links
- Emerald City at Oz Movies
- Emerald City at IMDB