Cosi (film)
Cosi | |
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Directed by | Mark Joffe |
Screenplay by | Louis Nowra |
Based on | Così by Louis Nowra |
Produced by |
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Starring | |
Cinematography | Ellery Ryan |
Edited by | Nicholas Beauman |
Music by | Stephen Endelman |
Production companies |
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Distributed by | Roadshow Entertainment |
Release date |
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Running time | 100 minutes |
Country | Australia |
Language | English |
Budget | A$3.5 million[1] |
Box office | A$2,896,980 (Australia) |
Cosi is a 1996 Australian comedy-drama film directed by Mark Joffe. Louis Nowra wrote both the screenplay and the 1992 play it was originally based on.
Plot[]
Ben Mendelsohn stars as Lewis Riley, an unemployed young man who applies for a job as a director/drama teacher at a mental hospital. He lands the job and finds himself directing a production of the Mozart opera Così fan tutte, an elaborate, demanding piece of theatre, an opera in Italian. And it is going to be performed by a cast that he must select from among the patients, who only speak English.
One of the patients, Roy (Barry Otto), sweeps everything along before him, organising auditions, selecting cast members, and criticising the director. The cast chosen include three women: Julie (Toni Collette), Ruth (Pamela Rabe), and Cherry (Jacki Weaver); and two men: Henry (Paul Chubb) and Doug (David Wenham). The musical director is Zac (Colin Hay). The enthusiasm of Roy infects the group, and they charge headlong into a memorable production.
Alongside the story of Lewis, the theme of Così fan tutte is explored as it relates to his personal life. Lewis's relationship with his girlfriend Lucy (Rachel Griffiths), already under pressure, is not helped by a friend called Nick (Aden Young), who seems more interested in testing Lucy's faithfulness than anything else.
The story is loosely based on Nowra's own experience at producing Trial by Jury at Plenty Mental Hospital in suburban Melbourne in 1971.[2]
Cast[]
- Ben Mendelsohn as Lewis Riley
- Barry Otto as Roy
- Toni Collette as Julie
- Rachel Griffiths as Lucy
- Aden Young as Nick
- Colin Friels as Errol
- Jacki Weaver as Cherry
- Pamela Rabe as Ruth
- Paul Chubb as Henry
- Colin Hay as Zac
- David Wenham as Doug
(Mendelsohn, Otto and Wenham are the only cast members who have performed in the original stage play, portraying the same characters that they do on screen.)
Production[]
Cosi was directed by Mark Joffe, and produced by Richard Brennan and Timothy White. New Zealand actor Bruno Lawrence had to bow out of his role in the film due to ill-health. His part remained incomplete at the time of his death from lung cancer in 1995, and none of his footage was used in the final cut.[citation needed]
Critical reception[]
In 1996, Cosi was the 3rd most popular Australian film at the Australian Box Office. As at 2010, Cosi ranked 71 on the list of Top 100 Australian feature films of all time as compiled by Screen Australia.[3]
David Stratton, writing in Variety, described Cosi as "fast, funny and cleverly acted".[4] He also said it was "warm, generous, sentimental and expert entertainment."[4] The curator at Australian Screen Online said it "has a likeable humour, appealing characters and a compassionate heart. It's not really about mental illness so much as a tribute to the healing power of performance, and the theatre in general."[5]
Not all reviews were positive. James Berardinelli described Cosi as "a half-baked amalgamation of A Midwinter's Tale and Shine, and doesn't excel as either a comedy or a drama."[6] Cinephilia described Cosi as "a concatenation of caricatures in a predictable story of plucky determination and treacly redemption."[7]
Accolades[]
Award | Category | Subject | Result |
---|---|---|---|
AACTA Awards (1996 AFI Awards) |
Best Adapted Screenplay | Louis Nowra | Won |
Best Supporting Actor | Barry Otto | Nominated | |
Best Editing | Nicholas Beauman | Nominated |
Box office[]
Cosi grossed $2,896,980 at the box office in Australia.[8]
See also[]
References[]
- ^ "Production Survey", Cinema Papers, March 1995, p. 60
- ^ Cosi, AustLit (subscription required)
- ^ Top 100 Australian feature films of all time Archived 8 April 2010 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Jump up to: a b Stratton, David (25 March 1996). "Cosi". Variety. Retrieved 22 August 2010.
- ^ Byrnes, Paul. "Cosi 1996". Australian Screen. Retrieved 22 August 2010.
- ^ Cosi, A Film Review by James Berardinelli
- ^ Cosi, Cinephilia
- ^ ""Film Victoria – Australian Films at the Australian Box Office"" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 February 2011. Retrieved 28 October 2010.
Further reading[]
- Gillard, Garry (2001) H231 Australian Cinema: Unit Information and Study Guide. Perth, Murdoch University Press, p. 65.
- Malone, P. "Cosi" – Review in Cinema Papers, No. 109, April 1996, p. 41.
- O'Dometer, M. Cosi – review, 1996
- O'Regan, T. (1996) Australian National Cinema, New York/London, Routledge.
- Smith, M. "Running the Gamut" in Cinema Papers, No. 109, April 1996, p. 6.
External links[]
- Cosi (1996) at IMDb
- Cosi at Oz Movies
- Australian Screen, Cosi
- Paper by Joanne Ladiges
- 1996 films
- English-language films
- Australian films
- Films set in Australia
- Australian comedy films
- Films shot in Sydney
- Films directed by Mark Joffe
- Australian films based on plays
- Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in fiction
- Miramax films
- Films based on Così fan tutte