The True Story of Eskimo Nell

The True Story of Eskimo Nell
Directed by Richard Franklin
Produced by Richard Franklin
Ron Baneth
Written by Richard Franklin
Alan Hopgood
Based on ballad Ballad of Eskimo Nell by Robert Service
Starring Max Gillies
Serge Lazareff
Butcher Vachon
Music by Brian May
Cinematography Vince Monton
Edited by Andrew London
Production
company
Quest Films
Filmways Australasian Distributors
Distributed by Filmways
Release dates
  • 27 March 1975 (1975-03-27) (Melbourne)
  • June 1975 (1975-06) (Sydney)
Running time
103 minutes (original cut)
94 mins (Sydney)
Country Australia
Language English
Budget A$200,000[1]

The True Story of Eskimo Nell (retitled Dick Down Under in the United Kingdom[2]) is a 1975 Australian western comedy film produced, directed, and written by Richard Franklin, and starring Max Gillies as Deadeye Dick and Serge Lazareff as Mexico Pete. The film was the first film produced by Richard Franklin.

Based on and inspired by the bawdy Ballad of Eskimo Nell, which had actually been banned in Australia, with Deadeye Dick and Mexico Pete setting forth through the Australian Outback in search of the infamous prostitute, Eskimo Nell.

The film features large amounts of full frontal nudity which was one of the main attractions of the film at the time.

The film was part of the Australian New Wave, with most of the film being shot in Ballarat and some in Canada.

Plot

The film's unlikely protagonist is a mild-mannered window peeper named Dead-Eye Dick (Max Gillies). Dick spies on a Mexican couple. The husband is very jealous and is about to discover that his wife has a lover when Dick rescues the lover, whose moniker is Mexico Pete (Serge Lazareff). The worldly Pete counsels the shy Dick on his problems approaching women. Dick claims that he is waiting for an Alaskan Eskimo named Nell. Pete and Dick decide to travel to Alaska to find this fantasy woman, and they have several wacky misadventures along the way.

Cast

Development

Franklin says he got the idea to make the film when he was in Sydney producing The Jumping Jeweller of Lavender Bay and heard a tape recorded version of the poem Eskimo Nell. He thought it would make a great movie and several months later wrote a treatment.[3]

The movie became known as a sex comedy but Franklin says it was never his intention to make that sort of movie. He was more interested in exploring a male friendship along the lines of Midnight Cowboy (1969)[4] with elements of comic Westerns like Cat Ballou (1965).[5] He wrote a draft of the script which was set in the same locations as the poem, the Rio Grande and Alaska, and took it to Hollywood in 1972. However he encountered resistance from Hollywood agents, who believed "no one wants cold scripts", referring to the box office disappointment of movies like Ice Palace (1960) and Ice Station Zebra (1968).[3] He also discovered that the poem was not well known in the US. "It's known only in the 'English World', meaning Canada, Australia and England," said the director.[4]

Franklin returned home, then realised he could set the story just as easily in the Australian goldfields:

There was the desire to assert the Australian vernacular and thereby have a bit of lavatory humour in it, but at the same time I think, as opposed to Alvin and Barry McKenzie, to give a sense of our culture and history in terms of mateship. But basically it was designed to shock and, in retrospect, it's probably a bit tame.[6]

Franklin pitched the idea of the film to the Australian Film Development Corporation who at first rejected it, but then he re-pitched the project with a series of stills he had taken at Sovereign Hill. They gave him some development money and put him in contact with screenwriter Alan Hopgood.[7] According to Franklin, Hopgood mostly concentrated on the dialogue, while Franklin worked on structure.[5] The AFDC were impressed by the second draft and agreed to help finance.

Production

Eventually the AFDC provided $105,000, with additional funds from the distributor Filmways and some private investment.[3]

Franklin had been impressed by the segment "The Family Man" in the film Libido (1973) and wanted that film's stars, Max Gillies and Jack Thompson, to play the leads. Gillies accepted but Thompson wasn't not available so Serge Lazareff was cast instead.[5]

The film was shot in mid 1974 in rural Victoria, including Sovereign Hill and in an improvised studio in the Exhibition Building, Melbourne. A smaller unit shot some additional footage in Canada, including a scene involving pursuit on ice floes which was a homage to Way Down East. Most of this sequence was re shot in Melbourne.[1]

Release

The film received much criticism from conservative groups such as the Festival of LIght who claimed that government funds were being used to produce pornography.[1] Franklin:

The theatres were picketed, and it was actually fairly successful in terms of damaging the picture. I thought it would be great publicity, but the one thing people don't want to hear is that tax dollars have been wasted. The minute they hear that, they're less inclined to throw good money after bad, if you see what I mean. So the film was not successful.[4]

A British film based on the same poem, Eskimo Nell, was made around the same time. Its release in Australia was delayed until 1976 and its title changed to The Sexy Saga of Naughty Nell and Big Dick.[1]

The movie was not a commercial success, despite being recut for its Sydney release and helped lead to the demise of the Australian "ocker sex comedy" cycle.[1] "It was an attempt to do something kind of poignant," says Franklin. "In retrospect it probably should have been funnier than it was."[4] However Antony I. Ginnane worked on the overseas marketing of the film, starting his relationship with Richard Franklin.[7]

Richard Franklin admitted the movie changed what sort of movies he made:

One of the great disappointments for me, and I learned a lot from it, was showing it to my American friends - probably at the time we were there making Fantasm - and discovering they just didn't get the humour. That it was a kind of humour that didn't really travel well. They admired the filmmaking, they admired the craft, but they didn't laugh at any of the jokes. So the pathos and so on, which was really derived spiritually for me from Midnight Cowboy, worked, but not the comedy. And so my next film, using a lot of the same financiers, was an attempt to make a universal genre film.[4]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Andrew Pike and Ross Cooper, Australian Film 1900–1977: A Guide to Feature Film Production, Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1998 p286
  2. IMDb Trivia
  3. 1 2 3 Gordon Glenn & Scott Murray, "Richard Franklin", Cinema Papers, July 1974 p246-248
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 Interview with Richard Franklin, Mondo Stump, originally published in Eros Magazine Vol 3 No 1 (2003), Canberra accessed 15 October 2012
  5. 1 2 3 The True Story of Eskimo Nell, DVD (2004)
  6. Interview with Richard Franklin, 15 September 1995 accessed 14 October 2012
  7. 1 2 David Stratton, The Last New Wave: The Australian Film Revival, Angus & Robertson, 1980 p249
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