1988 Australian film
As Time Goes By | |
---|---|
Film poster | |
Directed by | Barry Peak |
Written by | Barry Peak |
Produced by | Chris Kiely |
Starring | Max Gillies Bruno Lawrence Nique Needles |
Cinematography | John Ogden |
Edited by | Ralph Strasser |
Music by | Peter Sullivan |
Release date |
|
Running time | 96 minutes |
Country | Australia |
Language | English |
Box office | AU $5,854 |
As Time Goes By (originally titled The Cricketer) is a 1988 Australian science fiction comedy film directed by Barry Peak and starring Max Gillies, Bruno Lawrence, and Nique Needles. A few bars of the title song (extracted from the film Casablanca) are heard in the Australian version of the film but not in overseas prints, because of its high cost.
Plot synopsis
Mike, a surfer from Penong, South Australia, receives from his dying mother a letter, written 25 years earlier, instructing him to meet its author at a spot 50 miles (80 km) west of the small town of Dingo on a certain date in 1989. The writer turns out to be an oddball alien in a time-travelling spaceship disguised as a roadside diner, "Joe Bogart's", dating from Manhattan project-era Los Alamos. On the way he encounters Ryder, once a famous cricketer but now a small-town policeman, on the trail of a murderous motorcyclist and his sidecar-riding sidekick — accomplices of Weston, a land-grabbing weather watcher who believes the desert is about to become valuable pasture, and who develops a temporary alliance with McCauley, a UFO hunter who will stop at nothing in his quest for fame and fortune.
It is the surfer's pre-ordained purpose to recover the spaceship's power module, which had been lost overboard, but is frustrated in his quest by Cheryl, a ditzy fellow-hitchhiker, who fancies it as a hat (it is disguised as a "King Beer" emblem) and the UFO hunter, who believes he can discover something by prising it open. He is assisted by his love interest Connie, a beautiful Mini-moke-driving farmer. Other characters include a weathered old bone collector, who hauls his "finds" in an ancient hand-cart, and Dingo's town storekeeper, involved in a never-ending fight against dust in his shop.
Cast
- Bruno Lawrence as Ryder
- Nique Needles as Mike
- Ray Barrett as J. L. Weston
- Marcelle Schmitz as Connie Stanton
- Mitchell Faircloth as James McCauley
- Max Gillies as Joe Bogart
- Deborah Force as Cheryl
- Christine Keogh as Margie
- Don Bridges as Ern
- Jane Clifton as Mechanic
Accolades
Nique Needles won Best Actor in A Science Fiction Film (billed as L'Australieno) at the 1988 Fantafestival.
Tony Harrison called the film "bizarre and entertaining".
Home media
The film was released to VHS but not DVD.
References
- "Australian Films at the Australian Box Office", Film Victoria Archived 9 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine accessed 24 October 2009
- David Stratton, The Avocado Plantation: Boom and Bust in the Australian Film Industry, Pan MacMillan, 1990 p 282–283
- Tony Harrison (1994). The Australian Film and Television Companion. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0731804554.
External links
This article related to an Australian film of the 1980s is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it. |