|
The Overlanders (1946, Australia/UK)
In British writer/director Harry Watt's influential,
dramatic, western-adventure epic of WWII, a recreation of a true-life
event that occurred in 1942 -- it was the first Ealing Studios production
in Australia, the first Australian movie to be filmed almost entirely
outdoors, and a precursor to Howard Hawks' similar western Red
River (1948):
- the opening sequence that provided background information
-- a close-up of a government poster with a caricatured Japanese
soldier reaching out over a map of Australia; stern voice-over
narration explained the dire problem, and how Australia would be
saved by its landscape and resources: "In 1942, the Japanese
were driving invincibly southward from Singapore. It seemed inevitable
that next into their hands would fall the Northern Territory of
Australia, the largest undeveloped region in the world, with a
million head of cattle, and a population of only five thousand
whites. Space, scorched earth and space were Australia's final
weapon. But first, the vast herds of the North must be saved. And
so, across Australia moved a mass migration unique in history.
From small beginnings, the mobs of cattle poured south in an almost
unending flood. This is the story of one mob, and the people who
drove it, across a continent"
- the view of Northern Territory patriarch Bill Parsons
(John Nugent Hayward) destroying his family's homestead (by puncturing
his metal water tank and burning down his house), as the family watched
from a distance; he made a resolute proclamation to his wife (Jean
Blue) as he climbed in the wagon before leaving forever: "The
Japs'll get nothing from me" - he was fulfilling a 'scorched-earth'
policy
- the introduction of the main Australian heroic bushman
character: tall drover Dan McAlpine (Chips Rafferty, known as "the
Australian Gary Cooper", or a 1940s version of Crocodile Dundee),
who learned about the official Australian 'scorched earth' policy
(designed to avoid having the invading Japanese in the Northern Territory
benefit from their resources); he was delivering about 1,000 beef
cattle to the Australian Meat Export plant at Wyndham (Western Australia
on the N. coast); the whole area was being evacuated and he was ordered
to shoot his herd; he chose to reject the policy: "I'm not gonna
shoot those cattle, Bert...I won't leave them for the Jap boys. I'll
overland 'em..."
- the manager Bert Malone (Stan Tolhurst) of the plant
warned, using a map as an aid, that it would be a treacherous and
suicidal 1,500 mile trek to drive the cattle southward to Brisbane
in Queensland, across the Australian outback, but McAlpine was determined: "Bullocks
are more important than bullets"; Bert added: "You know
what you're tryin' to do, Dan? You're tryin' to drive a mob of half-wild
cattle the distance from London to Moscow - in a bad season at the
wrong time of the year"
- McAlpine's recruited motley crew included Scottish
sailor Hunter/"Sinbad" (Peter Pagan) ("I hate the
sea"), 'Corky' (John Fernside) - a gambler, two aboriginal stockmen
Jacky and Nipper (Clyde Combo and Henry Murdoch), and the Parsons
family fleeing south (husband, wife, and two daughters, one of whom
was Mary Parsons (Daphne Campbell) - an accomplished 20 year-old
herder); McAlpine described the 'unromantic' job to "Sinbad" - "There's
nothin' romantic about us, y'know. We don't carry guns or shoot up
rustlers. We're just plain cattlemen - hard yakka and hard tucker"
- the majestic cliffside view of "black fellas" (wild
and indigenous aboriginals) peacefully and calmly watching the line
of cattle way below them, signaling them with smoke signals
- the campfire scene when McAlpine scathingly criticized
Corky's intention to exploit the mineral wealth and land of Australia
after the war, after being shown Corky's drafted prospectus for his
Northern Territory Exploitation Company - Dan tore it up and burned
it: "There's just one thing wrong, Corky - that word exploit.
We've exploited our South for a hundred years and torn the heart
out of it. Territory's far too valuable to be messed about by get-rich
quick schemes like yours. I say let's save the North from what we've
done to the South...Leave it to Australians, ordinary Australians,
like Bill and his family. It's a national job, Corky, too big for
little people like you"
|
|
Dangers During the Trek
|
- the many depictions of dangers during the lengthy
cattle drive with the herd: crossing a river infested with crocodiles,
lack of food and water, heat dehydration and the potential of a
stampede, poisonous weed that killed the stockhorses, the dangerous
ascent of a steep and narrow mountain pass, etc.
|
Australian Government Poster
Burning of Parsons' Family Homestead: "The Japs'll
get nothing from me"
Dan McAlpine
(Chips Rafferty)
Cattle Drive Southward
Aboriginals Watching the Cattle Line Below
Campfire Scene: Argument Between McAlpine and Corky
|