Queensland is a 1976 film directed by John Ruane and starring John Flaus and Robert Karl.
Queensland | |
---|---|
Directed by | John Ruane |
Written by | John Ruane Ellery Ryan |
Produced by | Chris Fitchett |
Starring | John Flaus Robert Karl |
Cinematography | Ellery Ryan |
Edited by | Mark Norfolk |
Production company | Film Noir Productions |
Distributed by | the Vincent Library |
Release date |
|
Running time | 52 mins |
Country | Australia |
Language | English |
Budget | A$12,000[1] |
Doug is a factory worker living in Melbourne who dreams of moving from Melbourne to Queensland. He attempts to reconnect with an old flame, Marge, and move to Queensland together.
John Ruane says he was inspired by a newspaper article about a slaughterman who killed his de facto wife and then got drunk for two days. He decided to remove the killing aspect, concentrate on the relationship. Ruane:
What we were trying to do then, strangely enough, was trying to imitate Summer of the Seventeenth Doll in reverse and to imitate Midnight Cowboy, a sort of Northcote version of Midnight Cowboy - not the story, but the fact that they were headed for a dream. Their dream was Miami. Our film was obviously about heading to Queensland... It's about a vanishing breed of Australians.[2]
The film was made with money from the Experimental Film and Television Fund while John Ruane was a film student at the Swinburne College of Technology in Melbourne.[1]
The movie was released through the co-operative movement.[1]
Films directed by John Ruane | |
---|---|
|
![]() | This article related to an Australian film of the 1970s is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |