Backlash (1986 film)

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Directed byBill Bennett
Written byBill Bennett
Produced byBill Bennett
Backlash
Directed byBill Bennett
Written byBill Bennett
Produced byBill Bennett
StarringDavid Argue
Gia Carides
Lydia Miller
CinematographyTony Wilson
Edited byDenise Hunter
Music byMichael Atkinson
Michael Spicer
Distributed byDendy Films
Release date
  • 1986 (1986)
Running time
89 minutes
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish
BudgetAU $225,000[1] or $200,000[2]

Backlash is a 1986 Australian film directed by Bill Bennett.

Police officers Trevor Darling (David Argue) and Nikki Iceton (Gia Carides) escort a young Aboriginal woman Kath (Lydia Miller) to the New South Wales outback to stand trial. After getting stranded in the desert a bond grows between them. By the time they are rescued, both Nikki and Trevor believe Kath is innocent.

Cast

Production

Bill Bennett had raised $175,000 from the BBC and ABC to make a documentary about black tracker Jimmy James but was reluctant to proceed. He came up with the idea for the film and wondered if he could use the money to make a feature. Bennett got approval from the tax department and most investors to do this, with J C Williamson Ltd stepping in for the BBC and ABC. The final $50,000 of the budget came from Bennett himself.[1]

Bennett later said "when I start to think about a film, I don't think about it in terms of plot, I think about it in terms of theme. Then I often contrive a plot to explore a theme. In Backlash the theme that I really wanted to explore was, in broad terms, racism, but, specifically, people who are different. That was really what I wanted to explore. I was also interested in the Aboriginal spirituality, which I tried to get across in the Brian Syron character and the sense of the spiritual aspect of the man."[2]

Bennett wrote a 27 page scene breakdown with no dialogue - this would be improvised by the cast. "It has been my contention that in Australian films actors have always been treated as props... so I decided to give them more power," he said.[3] Bennett wanted to add some levity in the material and so cast David Argue, who had impressed him on stage. He was impressed by Gia Carides' improvisational skills in theatresports and cast her to act alongside him. Nurse Lydia Miller rounded out the main cast.[1]

The film was shot chronologically over 18 days. Bennett said "David's character was very volatile and aggressive, so was Gia's at times. There wa a thin line between what happened on camera and off."[3] During filming out near Broken Hill Bennett often clashed with David Argue, who quit a week before shooting ended. However he came back and completed the film.[1] Argue later called making the movie "a total bloody nightmare, but I think it's the best thing I've ever done."[4]

Release

References

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