Lust and Revenge

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Directed byPaul Cox
Written byPaul Cox
John Clarke
Release date
  • 1996 (1996)
Lust and Revenge
Directed byPaul Cox
Written byPaul Cox
John Clarke
StarringNicholas Hope
Gosia Dobrowolska
Claudia Karvan
Chris Haywood
Release date
  • 1996 (1996)
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish
Box officeA$170,000 (Australia)[1]

Lust and Revenge is a 1996 film directed by Paul Cox. It was shot in South Australia.[2][3]

The movie was the last film performance of John Hargreaves.

Georgina Oliphant (Claudia Karvan) commissions her friend Lily Carmichael (Victoria Eagger) to create a sculpture for a new wing at the National Gallery. Georgina's wealthy father George (Chris Haywood), who owns a pharmaceutical company, is giving her daughter the money so he can use it as a tax deduction.

Karl Heinz (Nicholas Hope) is chosen as the model for the sculpture and plans to use his $10,000 fee to put a down payment on a cottage. His wife Celia (Gosia Dobrowolska) is not enthusiastic about Karl posing and is caught up in a new age religion led by Baba Charles (Norman Kaye). Celia wants Karl to ask George for money for her religion.

Georgina has a history of mental instability. One night she attacks the house of her ex-husband and her therapist puts her on a new medication. It causes Georgina's libido to increase and she seduces Karl.

Cast

Production

Cox had intended to make a film Suicide of a Gentleman but Film Victoria decided not to finance the film arguing it had invested $1,224,000 into his last four films and received very little in return. Cox had a crisis of confidence. He then wrote a first draft of Lust and Revenge which was received positively by the head of the South Australian Film Corporation. Cox brought in John Clarke, with whom he had collaborated on Lonely Hearts to work on the script. The film was shot over five weeks in Adelaide in August 1995. Wendy Hughes made a cameo in drag.[3]

Reception

References

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