The Nun and the Bandit
The Nun and the Bandit | |
---|---|
Directed by | Paul Cox |
Written by | Paul Cox |
Based on | novel by E. L. Grant Watson |
Starring |
Gosia Dobrowolska Chris Haywood |
Release dates | 1992 |
Country | Australia |
Language | English |
The Nun and the Bandit is an Australian film directed by Paul Cox.[1]
Plot summary
In the 1940s, two outlaw brothers kidnap their wealthy 14-year-old second cousin, but things get complicated when her chaperoning nun refuses to abandon her charge.
Production
The film was made with finance from Film Victoria and the FFC. It was shot near Bacchus Marsh, Maldon in Victoria.[2]
Release
Cox called the movie "minimal filmmaking":
It's the very first time I read a book that I wanted to film, because I normally don't believe the film has much to do with the novel. I wasn't at the screening at the Melbourne Film Festival but I never want to screen a film at a festival again. That screening actually killed the release. It got bad reviews in a few places, so Roadshow wouldn't even release it. I think that as an Australian bush film, it is a very, very original film, a highly original piece. The forest, the beauty of the land, that's the altar, and the sacrifice is the innocence and youth. You have a sacrifice on an altar. But it gave me enormous satisfaction because the finished film is very nicely tuned, minimal when you look at the way it's crafted... But that's not what the reviewers want, a bush film like this. That's not very Australian, is it?[3]
References
- ↑ Rafaelle Caputo, "The Nun and the Bandit", Cinema Papers,August 1993 p9-10, 60
- ↑ Scott Murray, Australia on the Small Screen 1970-1995, Oxford Uni Press, 1996 p155
- ↑ "Interview with Paul Cox", Signet, 13 January 2001 accessed 18 November 2012
External links
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