Long Weekend (1978 film)

Long Weekend is an Australian psychological thriller film shot in 1977 and first shown in 1978. The film was directed by Colin Eggleston and stars John Hargreaves and Briony Behets.

Long Weekend
Theatrical film poster
Directed byColin Eggleston
Produced byColin Eggleston
Screenplay byEverett De Roche
StarringJohn Hargreaves
Briony Behets
Music byMichael Carlos
CinematographyVincent Monton
Edited byBrian Kavanagh
Production
company
Dugong Films
Distributed byHoyts Distribution
Release date
October 1978 (1978-10) (Sitges Film Festival)[1]
Running time
92 minutes[2]
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish
BudgetAU$425,000[3] or $270,000[4]

Plot

The story concerns a couple, Peter (Hargreaves) and Marcia (Behets), who, along with their dog, go for a weekend camping trip. The pair show incredible disrespect for nature, especially Peter, such as polluting, killing a dugong, throwing lit cigarette butts in dry bush, and spraying insecticide.[5] As tensions between the couple escalate, nature is not pleased with their environmental wrongdoing and starts to strike back, first by an eagle and possum attacking Peter, and then through more insidious means.[6]

Cast

Production

The script was the first feature script written by Everett De Roche, an experienced Australian TV writer. He was inspired by a trip he took on an Easter weekend to an isolated beach in New South Wales:

I started LW as a way to avoid the TV-cop-show doldrums while still convincing myself I was "working". LW was a unique project because I began with no outline, no notes or research, very little idea as to where the story was going, and absolutely zero knowledge of screenplays. I simply started at page 1, scene 1, and made it up as I went. I had only a vague plan to write a kind of environmental horror story. My premise was that Mother Earth has her own auto-immune system, so when humans start behaving like cancer cells, She attacks. I also wanted to avoid a JAWS-like critter film. I wanted the LW beasties to all be benign-looking and not overtly aggressive.[7]

De Roche wrote the script in ten days.[8] He showed it to Colin Eggleston, who had worked with him at Crawfords, and Eggleston decided to make the movie.[7] Funds were obtained from Film Victoria and the Australian Film Commission.

Shooting took place in March–April 1977 in Melbourne and near Bega in south-east New South Wales. The ending was originally different according to De Roche:

I wrote an enormously complicated sequence for near the end where the animals give Peter a second chance. They want him to wise up, and he is at the point of doing so when he hears a truck in the distance. He dashes off to the highway, and the animals decide there is no hope. Poetically, they leave it to another man to kill him.[8]

However his scene was too difficult to shoot because it involved animals and was cut.[8]

Release

The film premiered at the Sitges Film Festival in October 1978.[9]

The film tied with Invasion of the Body Snatchers to win the Antennae II Award at the Avoriaz Fantastic Film Festival, won the Special Jury Award at 1978's Paris Film Festival and won Best Film, Prize of the International Critics' Jury for director Eggleston and Best Actor for Hargreaves.[10]

It was not released theatrically in Australia until 1979, and was a commercial disappointment.[3]

Critical reception

AllMovie wrote, "Long Weekend is little more than an extended cautionary tale about the karmic foolishness of disrespecting nature.[11] DVD Times praised the film, and also commented on its obscurity: "when an obviously well made and executed little thriller comes along, an exercise in controlled dread and eerie atmosphere that's really effective, you have to ponder the reasons why the vast majority passed on it. Early Australian cinema seems cursed in this category."[12]

De Roche later expressed some dissatisfaction with the film:

Unfortunately, the bush comes across as a threat too early; it should have emerged as a threat only after the audience had sympathized with the animals. And I don’t think that sympathy is there. Long Weekend would have been much better if the audience had been told at the beginning that Peter and Marcia were going to die. This way, it wouldn’t have had to sympathize with them, and could have concerned itself solely with when this was going to happen. Such is the essence of suspense.[8]

Remake

In 2008, Australian director Jamie Blanks shot a remake of the film (alternately titled Nature's Grave). The film starred James Caviezel and Claudia Karvan.[13]

See also

References

  1. https://sitgesfilmfestival.com/eng/arxiu/1978
  2. Film Society of Lincoln Center Announces Scary Movies 3
  3. David Stratton, The Last New Wave: The Australian Film Revival, Angus & Robertson, 1980 p247-248
  4. "Long Weekend", Cinema Papers, July 1977 p57
  5. "Long Weekend – Horrors". Archived from the original on 28 July 2011. Retrieved 15 December 2009.
  6. "Tierhorror.de – Long Weekend (1978)". Archived from the original on 17 December 2009. Retrieved 19 September 2009.
  7. An Interview with Everett de Roche, Spectacular Optical, 1 June 2012 accessed 19 October 2012
  8. Paul Davies, "Everett De Roche", Senses of Cinema, 12 July 2008 accessed 26 October 2012
  9. https://sitgesfilmfestival.com/eng/arxiu/1978
  10. IMDB Awards
  11. Armstrong, Derek. "Long Weekend (1978)". AllMovie. Retrieved 18 August 2012.
  12. Gibron, Bill (27 September 2005). "Long Weekend: SE : DVD Talk Review of the DVD Video". DVD Talk. Retrieved 18 August 2012.
  13. "Tierhorror.de – Long Weekend (2008)". Archived from the original on 13 February 2010. Retrieved 19 September 2009.
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