The Overlanders (film)
The Overlanders | |
---|---|
File:The Overlanders VideoCover.jpeg | |
Directed by | Harry Watt |
Produced by | Michael Balcon Ralph Smart (associate) |
Written by | Harry Watt Ralph Smart |
Starring | Chips Rafferty John Nugent Hayward Daphne Campbell John Fernside Peter Pagan Helen Grieve Jean Blue |
Music by | John Ireland |
Cinematography | Osmond Borradaile |
Edited by | Inman Hunter Leslie Norman |
Distributed by | British Empire Films (Aust) Ealing Studios (UK) Umbrella Entertainment (Aust) Universal Pictures (US) |
Release dates
|
27 September 1946 (Australia) 1947 (France) |
Running time
|
91 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom Australia |
Language | English |
Budget | ₤40,000[1] or £80,000[2] |
Box office | ₤160,000 (Australia)[3] 1,143,888 admissions (France)[4] £250,000 (total)[2] |
The Overlanders is a 1946 British film about drovers driving a large herd of cattle 1,600 miles overland from Wyndham in Western Australia through the Northern Territory outback of Australia to pastures north of Brisbane, Queensland during World War II.
The film was the first of several produced in Australia by Ealing Studios, and featured among the cast Chips Rafferty.
Contents
Plot
In 1942 the Japanese army is thrusting southwards and Australia fears invasion. Bill Parsons becomes concerned, and leaves his homestead in northern Australia along with his wife and two daughters, Mary and Helen. They join up with a cattle drive heading south led by Dan McAlpine. Others on the drive include the shonky Corky; British former sailor, Sinbad; Aboriginal stockmen, Nipper and Jackie.
The cattle drive is extremely difficult, encountering crocodiles, blazing heat and other dangers. Mary and Sinbad start a romance. Dan speaks out against Corky's plans to develop the Northern Territory.
Cast
- Chips Rafferty as Dan McAlpine
- John Nugent Hayward as Bill Parsons
- Daphne Campbell as Mary Parsons
- Jean Blue as Mrs Parsons
- Helen Grieve as Helen Parsons
- John Fernside as Corky
- Peter Pagan as Sinbad
- Frank Ransome as Charlie
- Stan Tolhurst as Bert
- Marshall Crosby as Minister
- Clyde Combo as Jackie
- Henry Murdoch as Nipper
- Edmund Allison as two-up player
- Jock Levy as two-up player
- John Fegan as Police Sergeant
Development
The film came about because the Australian government were concerned that Australia's contribution to the war effort was not being sufficiently recognised. They contacted Britain's Ministry of Information, who in turn spoke with Michael Balcon at Ealing Studios, who was enthusiastic about the idea of making a film in Australia. He sent Harry Watt out to find a subject. Watt travelled the country as an official war correspondent and guest of the Australian government. He would spend eighteen months in Australia making the film.[1]
Watt decided to exploit the Australian landscape by making a film set entirely outdoors. When visiting a government office in Canberra to advise on making documentaries, he heard about an incident in 1942 when 100,000 cattle were driven 2,000 miles in the Northern Territory to escape a feared Japanese invasion.[5]
Watt was only allowed to import four technicians from Britain to assist – editor Inman Hunter, cinematographer Osmond Borradaile, production supervisor Jack Rix[6] and camera operator Carl Kayser. The rest of the crew were drawn from Australia.
Watt spent 1944 travelling the route of the trek. Dora Birtles researched the subject in government files and archives. She later wrote a novelisation of the script which was published.
Casting
There were nine lead roles and the casting process took two months.[7] Watt ended up selecting four professional actors, an experienced amateur, and four newcomers to films. Chips Rafferty, who Watt described as an "Australian Gary Cooper"[8] was given his first lead role. Daphne Campbell was a nursing orderly who had grown up in the country but had never acted before. She was screen tested after her picture was seen on the cover of a magazine, and selected over hundreds of applicants.[9] Peter Pagan had worked in Sydney theatre and was serving in the army when selected by Watt.[10] Clyde Combo and Henry Murdoch were cast as the aboriginal stockmen; they came from Palm Island because Harry Watt believed Northern Territory aboriginals did not speak English sufficiently well.[11]
Chips Rafferty and John Nugent-Hayward were paid £25 a month for five months.[12]
Production
Five hundred cattle were purchased by Ealing for use in the film. They were marked with the "overland" brand and later sold off for profit.
Shooting began in April 1945 at Sydney's North Head quarantine station, which stood in for the meat export centre at Wyndham in Western Australia.[13] The unit was then flown by the RAAF to Alice Springs where they were based in an army camp.[7]
A second unit headed by John Heyer spent several weeks filming movement of cattle from the air.[14]
Three months later, the unit moved to the Roper River camp on the Elsey Station for another month, where the river crossing sequence was shot. This station was famous from the book We of the Never Never. In mid-September the unit returned to Sydney after five months of shooting.[15]
During the making of the film, Campbell met and married her future husband.[16]
The Australian government later declared they spent £4,359 to assist in the production of the film.[17]
Post production work was done in Britain. The film score was written by the English composer John Ireland. It was his only film score. An orchestral suite was extracted from the score by the conductor Sir Charles Mackerras after Ireland's death.[18]
Harry Watt claimed the original ending was more cynical, finishing with the unscrupulous 'Corky' being the only one who got a good job out of the trek, and a fade out on a roar of sardonic laughter from the rest of the overlanders. However he says he was advised to put a more upbeat ending.[19]
Ealing were so pleased with Rafferty's performance they signed him to a long-term contract even before the film had been released.
Post Production
According to Leslie Norman, Harry Watt was not satisfied with the editing job done by Inman Hunter "so they asked me to take it over. I actually ripped it all apart and started over again. But I thought this could ruin Ted Hunter's career so I suggested they credit him as editor and I would take the title of supervising editor."[20]
Reception
Neither Rafferty nor Campbell were able to make the film's Sydney premiere because Rafferty was making a film in the UK, and Campbell was looking after a one-week-old baby in Alice Springs. However local actor Ron Randell attended and was mobbed.[16]
Reviews were extremely positive[21] and the film was enormously successful at the box office in Australia and Britain; by February 1947 it was estimated 350,000 Australians had seen it, making it the most widely seen Australian film of all time.[22] It was also the first Ealing picture to be widely seen in Europe.
Impact
This acclaim prompted Ealing (and its parent company, Rank, who distributed) to make a series of films in Australia out of Pagewood Film Studios.[5] Among the first discussed projects was an adaptation of the James Aldridge novel, Signed with Their Honour.[23]
By mid 1947 it appeared the company would make a co-production deal with Cinesound Productions but in August Sir Norman Rydge withdrew Cinesound. Ealing went ahead by themselves to make Eureka Stockade with Chips Rafferty.
Daphne Campbell received Hollywood enquiries and made a series of screen tests in Sydney but elected not to pursue a Hollywood career, staying with her husband and children in Alice Springs.[24] Peter Pagan moved overseas and worked extensively in the US and London.
Some minor changes for censorship were made for the film's US release including the removal of the word "damn".[25] The film was listed one of the 15 best films of the year by Bosley Crowther of the New York Times.[26]
Home Media
The Overlanders was released on DVD by Umbrella Entertainment in November 2012. The DVD is compatible with all region codes.[27]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Andrew Pike and Ross Cooper, Australian Film 1900–1977: A Guide to Feature Film Production, Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1998, 204.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ 'Who doesn't go to the pictures today?', The Mail (Adelaide) Saturday 22 May 1954 Supplement: Sunday Magazine p 21
- ↑ Box office figures in 1947 France at Box Office Story
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Philip Kemp, 'On the Slide: Harry Watt and Ealing's Australian Adventure', Second Take: Australian Filmmakers Talk, Ed Geoff Burton and Raffaele Caputo, Allen & Unwin 1999 p 145-164
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- ↑ id=the-overlanders-film-score-mc0002367341 label=John Ireland: The Overlanders, film score/ The Overlanders at AllMusic. Retrieved 29 April 2015.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Brian McFarlane, An Autobiography of British Cinema, Metheun 1997 p439
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- ↑ British Move In on Aussie Motion Picture Making: Will Have 2 Units There Before 1947 Pope, Quentin. Chicago Daily Tribune (1923-1963) [Chicago, Ill] 30 June 1946: e7.
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Further reading
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External links
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- Lua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). The Overlanders at IMDb
- The Overlanders at Australian Screen Online
- The Overlanders at BFI Screenonline
- The Overlanders at Oz Movie
- Pages with broken file links
- English-language films
- Use dmy dates from September 2010
- 1946 films
- 1940s drama films
- British films
- British drama films
- Black-and-white films
- Australian Western (genre) films
- Films based on actual events
- World War II films
- Films set in Australia
- Ealing Studios films
- Films directed by Harry Watt
- Films produced by Michael Balcon
- Film scores by John Ireland