The ’70s produced several films
about civilized men descending into barbarism, but most of these pictures were
predicated on the notion of violence begetting violence. For example, in Sam
Peckinpah’s Straw Dogs (1971), the
hero embraces brutality to protect his home from attackers. The disturbing
Australian drama Wake in Fright—originally
released in the U.S. as Outback—takes
a different route. In this movie, a genteel teacher becomes stranded in
Australia’s rugged interior, and then slowly begins to emulate the animalism of
bored rural types who pass their time by drinking, fighting, gambling hunting,
and screwing. Wake in Fright is a
slow burn, but once things click about an hour into the film, the story assumes
the quality of a nightmare. (Fair warning: If you find kangaroos adorable, you
will have a hard time watching this picture’s gory hunting scenes, which
feature real animals getting killed onscreen.)
English actor Gary Bond, whose
lanky frame and tanned skin make him look like a dark-eyed version of Peter
O’Toole, plays John Grant, the instructor at a one-room schoolhouse in Tiboonda,
Australia. On Christmas break, John heads for a vacation in Sydney by train,
only to get delayed in the desolate city of Bundanyabba. While stuck in “The
Yabba,” as the locals refer to the place, John loses all his cash gambling, so
he has no choice but to rely on the kindness of strangers. Unfortunately, those
strangers include such outback eccentrics as “Doc” Tydon (Donald Pleasence) and
his drinking buddies. These wild men consume beer like normal human beings inhale
oxygen, and their idea of a good time is driving around the countryside,
killing animals, smashing private property, and throttling each other during
vicious fistfights and wrestling matches. Yet as the days drag endlessly on,
John falls into his new acquaintances’ behavior patterns. How deeply John
travels into the moral abyss is best discovered while watching the movie, but
suffice to say the John Grant who staggers out of “The Yabba” after his darkest
night of sex and violence bears only a fleeting resemblance to the man who
began the journey.
Director Ted Kotcheff, a journeyman Canadian who made films
in a startling variety of genres, shoots Wake
in Fright stylishly, merging haunting standalone images—that shot of
Pleasence with coins over his eyes!—with elegant camera movements during
dialogue scenes. Throughout the picture, Kotcheff’s direction of actors,
visuals, and sound is focused and purposeful. In fact, even though he made
several films that were more accessible, including the sleek comedy Who Is Killing the Great Chefs of Europe?
(1978) and the vivid actioner First Blood
(1982), Wake in Fright might well be
Kotcheff’s finest hour as a cinema artist.
Perhaps because he’s not Australian,
Bond lends a believable tension to the story, approaching the weirdness of the
outback from an external perspective until his character is co-opted into
madness. Pleasence channels otherworldliness as only he can, and he spices his
role with ambiguous sexuality. (Kotcheff fleshes out the cast with a variety
macho men and put-upon women, conveying the sense of rural Australia as a
primeval battleground.) Wake in Fright
is infused with vivid textures, from the coarse dirt beneath the characters’
feet to the humid air that makes everyone sweat relentlessly. Wake in Fright leaves many crucial
narrative questions unanswered, but some of the images it presents are
scalding.
Wake in Fright: GROOVY
Just watched this myself, had pretty much the same reaction to it. I do prefer the title OUTBACK, however, and thanks for noting the lead actor's resemblance to a young Peter O'Toole - it was almost distracting to me while watching the movie!
ReplyDelete