The Naked Country

The Naked Country
Directed by Tim Burstall
Produced by Ross Dimsey
Written by Ross Dimsey
Tim Burstall
Based on novel by Morris West
Starring John Stanton
Rebecca Gilling
Ivar Kants
Distributed by Dumbarton Films
Release dates
1985
Country Australia
Language English
Budget AU$2.75 million[1]

The Naked Country is a 1985 Australian film. It was based on the 1957 novel by Morris West.

Production

In 1982 Ross Dimsey was finishing his contract as head of the Victoria Film Corporation and was looking for a project to do. Robert Ward of Filmways introduced him to the novel. Along with Mark Josem of Filmways and solicitor Bill Marshall they formed a company called Intronide to buy the rights to The Naked Country, which had been optioned several times but not made.[2]

Dimsey did a treatment which focused on the affair between the police officer and the station owner's wife.[3] He then approached Tim Burstall, with whom he had worked several times, to direct. Burstall agreed on the proviso that he helped write the script.[2] Tim Burstall:

I was a hired gun there; I didn't choose the material. He [Morris West] wrote it in 1945 and it really was a potboiler. It had the rudiments, the beginnings of land rights issues, but I took this and converted it absolutely into a land rights thing. To me the problem was I thought the business of Stanton versus the aborigines was okay. But there were indigestible lumps in the script like the adultery. And the Ivar Kants character was too melodramatic. I had to make him a mercenary from South Africa.[4]

The story was originally set in the Kimberley region but filming there would have been logistically impossible, so it was set in Queensland.[3]

Ten percent of the budget was provided by the Queensland Film Corporation. The film's complete budget of $2.75 million was over subscribed by more than $1 million at the end of the 1983-84 financial year and the movie had a 30% combined foreign and Australian pre sale when production started.[2] The movie was shot in and around Charters Towers.[1] Dimsey later estimated that buying the rights to first day of filming took three months.[3]

Reception

The film performed poorly at the Australian box office but did better overseas, particularly in France and Germany, and Ross Dimsey says it got most of its money back. Dimsey says he regrets pulling back on the romantic plot and he felt the movie was a little old fashioned. He felt it was made under circumstances that were too rushed and the script had not been developed.[3]

References

  1. 1 2 David Stratton, The Avocado Plantation: Boom and Bust in the Australian Film Industry, Pan MacMillan, 1990 p72-73
  2. 1 2 3 Ewan Burnett, "Burstall and Dimsey Go West", Cinema Papers, May 1985 p48-49
  3. 1 2 3 4 Audio interview with Ross Dimsey, Naked Country DVD Special Features, Umbrella Entertainment, 2005
  4. Interview with Tim Burstall, 30 March 1998 accessed 14 October 2012
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