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The Year of Living Dangerously

 
Movies:

The Year of Living Dangerously

  • Director: Peter Weir
  • AMG Rating: starstarstarstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Political Drama, Romantic Drama
  • Themes: Political Unrest, Members of the Press
  • Main Cast: Mel Gibson, Sigourney Weaver, Linda Hunt, Michael Murphy, Bill Kerr
  • Release Year: 1982
  • Country: AU
  • Run Time: 114 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG

Plot

Mel Gibson stars in this period political thriller directed by Peter Weir. Set in Indonesia during the 1965 coup against President Sukarno, the film stars Gibson as Guy Hamilton, an Australian wire-service reporter covering the scene. Whenever Hamilton becomes too glib or indifferent for his own good, he is brought back to earth by his "conscience," photographer Billy Kwan (played in male drag by diminutive actress Linda Hunt, who won an Academy Award for her performance). As all of Jakarta sinks into disarray, Hamilton pursues a romance with British attaché Jill Bryant (Sigourney Weaver). Filmed on location in the Philippines and Australia, the film was financed by MGM, in the first such American-Australian financial collaboration. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Review

It would be wrong to say that The Year of Living Dangerously made stars of Mel Gibson and Sigourney Weaver; it solidified their stardom and also showed them to be fine actors. As Guy Hamilton, a young Australian radio journalist on the make, Gibson shows soul behind a pretty-boy face and magnetic eyes. His Hamilton is all modern ambition and quick answers until he runs into what director Peter Weir portrays best: the collision between new and old societies. Gibson's greatest success comes when Hamilton endures the pain of deciding whether to air a story that would expose British attaché Jill Bryant (Weaver) as his source. His pain is compelling; in later roles (particularly the Lethal Weapon series), Gibson undergoes torture to achieve the same effect, a pattern that repeats itself in almost all of his successive roles. Weir portrays the Indonesia of 1965 as a place where Western blandishments ring especially hollow against the poverty, misery, and oddly spiritual life. He uses an unearthly score and bright, contrasty colors (especially the blue shirt Gibson usually wears) in the glittery, sterile palaces of the Sukarno regime to contrast with the dirt and darkness of Indonesia's poverty. And in Linda Hunt's Academy Award-winning performance as photographer Billy Kwan, Weir has a great voice for the despair that the poverty engenders. But the movie's grasp of Southeast Asian politics isn't as strong as the romance between Gibson's and Weaver's characters. As in Weir's later Witness, the romance stays in mind long after the civics lesson has faded. ~ Nick Sambides, Jr., All Movie Guide

Cast

Noel Ferrier - Wally; Paul Sonkkila - Condon; Bembol Roco - Kumar; Domingo Landicho - Hortono; Norma Uatuhan - Ibu; Joonee Gamboa - Naval Officer; Joel Agona - Palace Guard; Hermono de Guzman - Immigration Officer; Mike Emperio - President Sukarno; Coco Marantha - Pool waiter; Bernardo Nacilla - Dwarf; Ali Nur - Ali; Dominador Robidillo - Betjak Man; Mark Egerton - Embassy aide; Joel Lamangan - Security Man 1

Credit

Terry Ryan - Costume Designer, Mark Egerton - First Assistant Director, Peter Weir - Director, William M. Anderson - Editor, Maurice Jarre - Composer (Music Score), Judy Lovell - Makeup, Herbert Pinter - Production Designer, Wendy Stites - Production Designer, Russell Boyd - Cinematographer, Tim Sanders - Production Manager, Peter Weir - Producer, James McElroy - Producer, Gary Wilkins - Sound Recordist, Peter Weir - Screenwriter, David Williamson - Screenwriter, C.J. Kock - Screenwriter, C.J. Koch - Book Author

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The Year of Living Dangerously

Theatrical poster
Directed by Peter Weir
Produced by Jim McElroy
Written by Christopher Koch (novel)
Peter Weir
David Williamson
Starring Mel Gibson
Sigourney Weaver
Michael Murphy
Linda Hunt
Music by Maurice Jarre
Cinematography Russell Boyd
Editing by William M. Anderson
Distributed by MGM
Release date(s) 21 January 1983
Running time 117 minutes
Country Australia
Language English
Budget $6,000,000 (est.)
Gross revenue $10,278,575 (USA)

The Year of Living Dangerously is a 1982 Peter Weir film adapted from the novel of the same name by its author Christopher Koch, Weir, and David Williamson. The story is about a love affair set in Indonesia during the overthrow of President Sukarno. It follows a group of foreign correspondents in Jakarta on the eve of an attempted coup by the so-called 30 September Movement on 30 September 1965 and during the beginning of the violent reprisals by military-led vigilante groups who killed hundreds of thousands.

The film stars Mel Gibson as Guy Hamilton, an Australian journalist, and Sigourney Weaver as Jill Bryant, a British Embassy officer. It also stars Linda Hunt as the male dwarf Billy Kwan, Gibson's local photographer contact, a role for which Hunt won an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress. The film was shot in both Australia and the Philippines and includes Australian actors Bill Kerr as Colonel Henderson and Noel Ferrier as Wally O'Sullivan.

It was banned from being shown in Indonesia until 1999. The title The Year of Living Dangerously is a quote which refers to a famous Italian phrase used by Sukarno; vivere pericoloso, meaning "living dangerously". Sukarno borrowed the line for the title of his Indonesian Independence Day speech of 1964.

The film was entered into the 1983 Cannes Film Festival.

Contents

Plot

Guy Hamilton, a neophyte foreign correspondent for an Australian network, arrives in Jakarta on assignment. He meets the close-knit members of the foreign correspondent community including journalists from the UK, the US and New Zealand, diplomatic personnel, and a Chinese-Australian dwarf of high intelligence and moral seriousness, Billy Kwan. Hamilton is initially unsuccessful because his predecessor, tired of life in Indonesia, had departed without introducing Hamilton to his contacts. Guy receives limited sympathy from the journalist community, which competes for scraps of information from Sukarno's government, the Communist Party of Indonesia (PKI), and the conservative Muslim military. However, Kwan takes a liking to Hamilton and gives him interviews.

Kwan introduces Hamilton to Jill Bryant, a beautiful young assistant at the British embassy. Kwan and Bryant are close friends, and he subtly manipulates her encounters with Hamilton. After resisting Hamilton because she's returning to the UK, Bryant falls in love with an equally smitten Guy. This scandalous news is subsequently all over the foreigners' community. Discovering that the Communist Chinese are arming the PKI, Bryant passes this information to Hamilton to save his life, but he wants to cover the Communist rebellion that will occur when the arms shipment reaches Jakarta. Shocked, Kwan and Bryant withdraw their friendship from Hamilton, and he is left with the American journalist Pete Curtis, and his own assistant and driver Kumar, who is secretly PKI.

Kumar quietly shanghais Hamilton to keep him from harm and protect the information. Upon returning to Jakarta, Guy plumbs the depths with Curtis but then realizes his folly. Kwan, outraged by Sukarno's failure to meet the needs of most Indonesians, decides to hang an illegal sign from the Western hotel but is thrown from the window by security men, and dies in Hamilton's arms. His death is also witnessed by Jill. Still in search of "the big story", Hamilton visits the Presidential palace after the Muslim generals have taken over and unleashed executions, after they learned of the Communist shipment. Struck down by an Army officer, Hamilton sufferes a deatached retina.

Resting alone in Kwan's bungalow, Hamilton recalls a passage from the Bhagavad Gita ("all is clouded by desire") which Billy told him. Kumar visits him and tells him about the failed coup attempt. Risking permanent damage to his eye, Hamilton implores Kumar to drive him to the airport, where he boards the last plane out of Jakarta and is reunited with Bryant.

Cast

  • Mel Gibson as Guy Hamilton
  • Sigourney Weaver as Jill Bryant
  • Linda Hunt as Billy Kwan
  • Michael Murphy as Pete Curtis
  • Bill Kerr as Colonel Henderson
  • Noel Ferrier as Wally O'Sullivan
  • Bembol Roco as Kumar
  • Paul Sonkkila as Kevin Condon
  • Ali Nur as Ali
  • Dominador Robridillo as Betjak Man
  • Joel Agona as Palace Guard
  • Mike Emperio as Sukarno
  • Bernardo Nacilla as Dwarf
  • Domingo Landicho as Hortono
  • Hermino De Guzman as Immigration Officer

Production

As a sprawling epic backed by MGM with a $6 million budget,[1] The Year of Living Dangerously was by far the most ambitious Australian film undertaken to date and was the first co-production of Australia and a Hollywood studio. Although originally set to be filmed in Jakarta, permission to film in Indonesia was denied, so the bulk of the movie was filmed in the Philippines. Death threats against Peter Weir and Mel Gibson from Muslims who believed the film would be anti-Islam forced the production to move to Australia. Gibson downplayed the death threats, saying, "It wasn't really that bad. We got a lot of death threats to be sure, but I just assumed that when there are so many, it must mean nothing is really going to happen. I mean, if they meant to kill us, why send a note?"[2][3]

Mel Gibson described his character Guy, saying, “He's not a silver-tongued devil. He's kind of immature and he has some rough edges and I guess you could say the same for me.”[4]

The title music for the film is L'Enfant by Vangelis, which is also featured on his album Opera Sauvage.

Reaction

The Year of Living Dangerously was entered into the 1983 Cannes Film Festival[5] where it was well-received by audiences and critics.[6]

Film critic Roger Ebert gave the film four out of four stars and praised Linda Hunt's performance: "Billy Kwan is played, astonishingly, by a woman -- Linda Hunt, a New York stage actress who enters the role so fully that it never occurs to us that she is not a man. This is what great acting is, a magical transformation of one person into another".[7] In his review for The New York Times, Vincent Canby praised Mel Gibson's performance: "If this film doesn't make an international star of Mr. Gibson (Gallipoli, The Road Warrior), then nothing will. He possesses both the necessary talent and the screen presence".[8] However, Time magazine's Richard Corliss wrote, "But in his attempt to blend his preoccupations with the plot of C. J. Koch's 1978 novel, Weir has perhaps packed too much imagery and information into his movie ... The plot becomes landlocked in true-life implausibilities; the characters rarely get a hold on the moviegoer's heart or lapels".[9] In his review for the Washington Post, Gary Arnold described the film as "grievously flawed yet compelling tale of political intrigue, certainly a triumph of atmosphere if not of coherent dramatization".[10] Newsweek magazine called the film "an annoying failure because it fritters away so many rich opportunities".[11]

Actress Linda Hunt won an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress.[12]

References

  1. ^ Bob Thomas (1983-02-15). "Mel Gibson Has All Ingredients For Superstardom". Associated Press. 
  2. ^ Davin Seay (February 1983). "An American from Kangaroo-land hops to the top". Ampersand. 
  3. ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mzsz08GKhv0 GTV 9 Don Lane Show, Interview with Peter Weir and Mel Gibson, 1982
  4. ^ Vernon Scott (1983-02-24). "Mel Gibson: Australia's new hunk". U.P.I. 
  5. ^ "Festival de Cannes: Forbidden Relations". festival-cannes.com. http://www.festival-cannes.com/en/archives/ficheFilm/id/1375/year/1983.html. Retrieved 2009-06-17. 
  6. ^ Dionne, E.J. (May 23, 1983). "Cannes Over, Films Face the Public". The New York Times: pp. 13. 
  7. ^ Ebert, Roger (June 1, 1983). "The Year of Living Dangerously". Chicago Sun-Times. http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/19830601/REVIEWS/50602001/1023. Retrieved 2009-07-07. 
  8. ^ Canby, Vincent (January 21, 1983). "The Year of Living Dangerously". The New York Times. http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9951A0C0173BF932A35750C8BF67&partner=Rotten%20Tomatoes. Retrieved 2009-07-07. 
  9. ^ Corliss, Richard (January 17, 1983). "Waist-Deep in the Big Money". Time. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,951890,00.html. Retrieved 2009-07-07. 
  10. ^ Arnold, Gary (February 18, 1983). "Tale of Political Intrigue Is Flawed but Compelling". Washington Post: pp. C1. 
  11. ^ "Our Man in Jakarta". Newsweek: pp. 66. January 24, 1983. 
  12. ^ Worrell, Denise; Gerald Clarke (April 23, 1984). "The Night off the Great Prom". Time. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,921697,00.html. Retrieved 2009-07-07. 

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