Summer City
Summer City | |
---|---|
Directed by | Christopher Fraser |
Written by | Phil Avalon |
Produced by | Phil Avalon |
Starring | Mel Gibson John Jarratt Phil Avalon Steve Bisley James Elliott Abigail Ward "Pally" Austin |
Cinematography | Jerry Marek |
Edited by | David Stiven |
Music by | Phil Butkus |
Production company | Avalon Film Corporation Studio |
Distributed by | Intertropic films |
Release date | 22 December 1977 |
Running time | 83 min |
Country | Australia |
Language | English |
Budget | A$66,000[1] or $200,000[2] |
Summer City (also known as Coast of Terror) is a 1977 Australian drama thriller film, filmed in Newcastle, Australia. The film also features Mel Gibson in his debut role.
Plot[]
In the early 1960s, Sandy, Boo, Scollop and Robbie drive to the beaches north of Sydney for a surfing weekend. The boys are planning to give Sandy a memorable ‘one last fling’ before his impending marriage. Tension flares between university-educated Sandy and ocker Boo when Sandy decides not to join in the fun. At a local dance, Boo seduces Caroline, the teenage daughter of a caravan park owner who discovers what has happened and comes looking for Boo with a gun.[1]
Cast[]
- Mel Gibson as Scollop
- John Jarratt as Sandy
- Phil Avalon as Robbie
- Steve Bisley as Boo
- James Elliott as Caroline's father
- Debbie Forman as Caroline
- Abigail as the woman in pub
- Ward "Pally" Austin as himself
- Judith Woodroffe as the waitress
- Carl Rorke as Giuseppe
- Ross Bailey as Nail
- Hank Tick as Caveman
- Bruce Cole as the man in car
- Vicki Hekimian as Donna
- Karen Williams as Gloria
- Gary Tidd as Rocker in milk bar
- Len Purdie as rocker in milk bar
Production[]
The script was autobiographical, Avalon having been a passionate surfer for most of this life and grown up in Newcastle. He also served in the army for several years (although not in Vietnam). He says he offered the script to Brian Trenchard-Smith as director, but Trenchard-Smith suggested Avalon direct it himself because he knew the subject matter so well. Avalon eventually gave the job to Chris Fraser, a young director who had another project Avalon was going to produce.[3]
The film was shot on 16mm and blown up to 35 mm. Shooting began in October 1976 and took place near Sydney and Newcastle, especially in the town of Catherine Hill Bay.
Avalon invested $25,000 of his own money. He had another investor provide $25,000 plus twelve friends who put in $8,000.[3]
Release[]
The film proved popular and had a long run. It led to a sequel Breaking Loose (1988).
References[]
External links[]
- English-language films
- Australian thriller drama films
- 1977 films
- 1970s thriller drama films
- Australian films
- Australian surfing films
- 1977 drama films
- Films set in the 1960s
- Films set in Sydney
- Films shot in New South Wales
- 1970s Australian film stubs
- 1970s thriller film stubs