Rebel (1985 film)

Rebel
Directed by Michael Jenkins
Produced by Phillip Emanuel
Based on play No Names, No Pack Drill by Bob Herbert
Starring Matt Dillon
Debra Byrne
Bryan Brown
Production
company
Phillip Emanuel Productions
Distributed by Roadshow
Release dates
1985
Country Australia
Language English
Budget A$5 million[1]
Box office A$886,769 (Australia)[2]

Rebel is a 1985 Australian musical drama set in World War Two.

No Names No Pack Drill

The movie was based on the play No Names, No Packdrill, by Bob Herbert, uncle of Louis Nowra.

The play had its premiere in 1979 at the University of New England.

The play was performed by the Sydney Theatre Company in 1980 starring Mel Gibson and Noni Hazlehurst, directed by George Ogilvie. The production was so popular the season was extended at the Theatre Royal.[3]

It has been revived several times, notably in 2006.[4]

Production

Considerable changes were made from the play, including turning the female lead from a postal worker into a singer in a female band. It was originally hoped to cast Olivia Newton-John in this role but Debra Byrne was cast instead and made a great personal success in it.[5]

Director Mike Jenkins decided to push the musical aspect, and went for a stylised approach in collaboration with designer Brian Thomson. The manager Matt Dillon, who was imported to play the lead, did not like the approach, saying it was too much like a Francis Ford Coppola movie - which Thomson took as a compliment. He wanted his client to appear in a straight period film closer to Breaker Morant. However Jenkins and Thomson's vision prevailed.[6]

Citations

The film was not a large success. Director Mike Jenkins later said that:

It's funny, Rebel has attracted some fierce critiques from intellectuals who subsequently liked other things that I've done. But it also won five AFI awards and was the most nominated film of its year. It was a curious piece; it didn't altogether work. I was interested in it because of the basic story about the American boy who wants to desert. It said something about Australia and Sydney in World War II.[7]

References

  1. Greg Kerr, "Rebel", Australian Film 1978-1992, Oxford Uni Press 1993 p174
  2. "Australian Films at the Australian Box Office", Film Victoria accessed 24 October 2012
  3. http://dlibrary.acu.edu.au/staffhome/siryan/academy/theatres/sydney%20theatre%20comp.htm
  4. http://www.smh.com.au/news/arts-reviews/no-names--no-pack-drill/2006/08/11/1154803061103.html
  5. David Stratton, The Avocado Plantation: Boom and Bust in the Australian Film Industry, Pan MacMillan, 1990 p114
  6. Paul Kalina, "Seeing Red", Cinema Papers, January 1986 p23-25
  7. Interview with Mike Jenkins, 25 March 1996 accessed 19 October 2012
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