 

Peter Weir
Spätestens
seit "Der Club der toten
Dichter" und "Green Card"
zählt Peter Weir zu den erfolgreichsten
und besten Regisseuren des neueren
US-Kinos. Doch auch seine frühen in
Australien gedrehten Filme gelten als
Meisterwerke. Dies gilt vor allem für
"Picnic at Hanging Rock"
deutscher Titel "Picknick am
Valentinstag". Weirs Ruf, einer der
vollendetsten Stilisten unter den
Regisseuren zu sein, wurde mit
"Picnic at Hanging Rock"
begründet. Erstmal bestach er durch
seine besondere Kunst, Landschaften und
Stimmungen mit dem Kern der Handlung zu
verschmelzen und dadurch eine bezwingende
Atmosphäre zu schaffen. Und wie nur
wenige großen Regisseuren gelingt es
Weir mit diesem Film, den Zuschauer
zutiefst zu beunruhigen, indem er
mystische, unerklärliche Geschehnisse
mit unserer rationalen, von Konventionen
geprägten Welt konfrontiert. Die hier
erstmals vollendet gelungene Kombination
dieser Fähigkeiten, die sich in allen
späteren Erfolgen Weirs wiederfinden,
macht "Picnic at Hanging Rock"
zum zeitlosen Klassiker. Der Film
basierte auf einer wahren Begebenheit und
brachte Peter Weir erstmals
internationale Anerkennung ein.


Joan
Lindsay
Joan
Lindsay wurde 1896 in St. Kilda/Vic.,
Australien, geboren. Sie hat eine Reihe
von Romanen geschrieben. Mit "Picnic
at Hanging Rock" ist ihr ein
Meisterwerk des Mystery-Writings
gelungen. Das Buch wurde später in einen
ausgezeichneten Film gebildet. Joan
Lindsay starb im Dezember 1984. Wie sie
es testamentarisch verfügt hatte,
erschien ein erklärendes
Abschlußkapitel am dritten Valentinstag
nach ihrem Tode (14. Februar 1987). Die
Autorin hat in diesem zusätzlichen
achzehnten Kapitel das Geheimniss des
"Picnic at Hanging Rock"
aufgelöst. Jetzt endtlich erfährt man,
was mit den drei Vermissten geschehen
ist. Peter Weir hat den Roman 1976
verfilmt und damit einen Meilenstein des
australischen Kinos gesetzt. In seiner
stimmungsvollen Umsetzung der Atmosphäre
des Romans verzichtete er damals aber
ebenfalls auf eine Auflösung, so daß
das Rätsel hier zum erstenmal gelöst
wird. Doch was ist damals am Valentinstag
im jahre 1900 wirklich mit dem Mädchen
passiert? Ein Rätsel.

Der Roman
"Picnic at Hanging Rock - Limited
Edition"

"Picnic
at Hanging Rock - Limited Edition"
Buch BESTELLEN
In
Australien ist der Roman Buch
"Picnic at Hanging Rock - The
Limited Edition" erschienen und es
handelt sich hierbei um den selben Roman
Buch zum Film den man schon kennt, nur in
grösserer Ausgabe und mit sehr vielen
Bildern untermalt. Hier werden all die
entfallenen Filmszenen, die der Regisseur
wohl aus persöhnlichen Gründen
weggelassen hat, als Bild gezeigt und vor
allem auch beschrieben. Einer dieser
entfallenen Filmszenen ist zum Beispiel
die mit der College Direktorin Miss
Appleyard die sich zum Felsen Hanging
Rock begibt. Der Film "Picnic at
Hanging Rock" endet mit den Tod der
jungen Sarah die aus dem Fenster des
College in den Tod stürzt und mit Miss
Appleyard, die in ihrer schwarzen
Bekleidung, in der endszene des Films mit
einem starren Blick in der Kamera blickt.
Danach ist der Film zu Ende und man sieht
einen kurzen Rückblick wom Picknick
Platz wo alle Mädchen am Fuße des
Felsens den Tag genossen. Doch in
wirklichkeit ging der Film ganz anders zu
Ende, so im Roman Buch von Joan Lindsay.
Denn zum Schluss begibt sich Miss
Appleyard selber zum Felsen Hanging Rock
hin und begegnet dort zwischen einer
Felsspalte, die verstorbene Sarah die ihr
von dort aus zu lächelt. Voller Angst
geht sie mit langsamen Schritten zurück,
fällt den Felsen hinab und stirbt. Dies
hier unten sind die sogenannten Endszenen
des Filmes mit Miss Appleyard am Hanging
Rock und die in diesem Limited Edition
Roman Buch enthalten sind.




Martindale
Hall
Dies ist
die "Martindale Hall" in
Australien und sie wurde als das
"Appleyard College" benutzt
für die Dreharbeiten zum Film
"Picnic at Hanging Rock".


After the picnic
23
November 2002
Picnic At Hanging
Rock - with its sun-soaked imagery and
dark undercurrents of mystery - remains
an iconic Australian film. But its stars'
lives were changed forever, some
triumphantly, some tragically. Michelle
Griffin reports. On a hot November day in
the late '80s, high school student David
Critchley got home in time to switch on
the Channel Seven midday movie, Picnic
at Hanging Rock. It
was already half over, but Critchley
watched it anyway, enthralled. It was the
beginning of an obsession. Critchley, now
a 28-year-old production assistant, has
spent the past six years researching the
production of Peter Weir's film and the
stories behind Joan Lindsay's novel.
First he wanted to make a documentary
about the book, but when that didn't
eventuate, he decided to make a book
about the film. Not an essay about the
making of the film. With the considerable
financial support of the Hanging Rock
Advisory Committee, Critchley produced a
gorgeous coffee-table book of the
original Picnic at
Hanging Rock novel,
interlaced with excerpts from Cliff
Green's screenplay and illustrated with
hundreds of never-published images from
the film. Next week, the book will be
launched at Hanging Rock in what will
also be a tribute to the film. Miranda,
in the form of actor Anne-Louise Lambert
(ABC's Changi),
will finally return. Screenwriter Green,
now writing for Channel Seven's Marshall
Law, will come, as
will producer Jim McElroy. Jenny Lovell,
the Melbourne actor, director and drama
teacher who got her first break in Picnic
playing schoolgirl
Blanche, will bring a photograph of her
friend Jane Vallis, the actor who played
Marion, the other girl who disappeared
forever. Vallis died of cancer 10 years
ago. Lovell, daughter of one of the
film's producers, Patricia Lovell, was
cast despite her mother's objections.
"She didn't want it to look like I'd
got the part because of her." Now
Patricia runs Impro Melbourne, which
stages local theatre sports. She also
works across theatre, film and
television, and teaches drama at the
Victorian College of the Arts and St
Martin's Youth Theatre. "I'm going
to the launch for a catch-up and a
gossip," she says. In his search for
a missing scene of headmistress Mrs
Appleyard committing suicide on the rock,
Critchley discovered the mother lode: the
original rushes from the film production,
full of unseen footage, kept in three sea
chests under a stairwell in a Sydney
house. Normally, a film's rushes are
destroyed, but in this case they'd been
saved by a crew member. Some publishers
knocked back Critchley's proposal for a
coffee-table book that celebrated both
the sun-soaked imagery of the film and
the dark undercurrents of the novel.
Finally, the Macedon Ranges Shire Council
agreed to fund a limited edition of the
book as a way of promoting Hanging Rock.
At first, says Critchley, he consulted
Peter Weir closely on his proposals for
the book's look and feel. But then Weir
became too busy. "He told me I had
to keep everything to the standard of the
original proposals I'd sent him,"
says Critchley. "So that was my
guide - would Peter like this?"
Fifteen hundred softcover versions have
been printed, while 200 individually
numbered hardcover books are also
available, complete with a strip of the
original film. The very first hardcover
printed has been on a voyage around the
world to collect the signatures of as
many of the film's cast and crew as
Critchley could find. "There's a
line of Lindsay's where she says, 'the
pattern of the picnic continues to
spread'," says Critchley. "And
it really does. When you go looking for
people involved in the film, they've all
got their own stories, some a bit dark,
some have been really successful.
Apparently when Lindsay visited the set,
she said that this film would change
people's lives, and it did." The
darkest parallel was between the
character of headmistress Mrs Appleyard,
whose suicide scene was cut from the
film, and the English actor Rachel
Roberts, who portrayed her. She committed
suicide by poisoning in 1980. In some
ways, Picnic at
Hanging Rock was a
kind of Petri dish for the Australian
film industry. There were other films,
good films, at the same time, but what
other film of 1975 grew so many careers
in the industry? Picnic's
director, Weir, and cinematographer,
Russell Boyd, have both gone on to
international acclaim, and they've just
finished production of the Russell Crowe
film Master and
Commander in Mexico.
Camera operator John Seale went on to
become the Oscar-winning cinematographer
of The English
Patient. He's just
finished shooting Cold
Mountain with Nicole
Kidman. Picnic at
Hanging Rock gave
early exposure to actors such as Jacki
Weaver, Helen Morse, Garry McDonald, John
Jarratt (McLeod's
Daughters and Better
Homes and Gardens)
and Vivean Gray (Mrs Mangel from Neighbours).
You can find Picnic alumni in make-up
departments, production design, special
effects, sound design, and other film
specialties in Australia and around the
world. Screenwriter Green was one of the
writers on the ABC's Janus
and Phoenix,
and the creator of the newspaper drama Mercury.
The Australian Film Commission's chief
executive, Kim Dalton, started out as the
film's second assistant director. "I
always keep an eye on the credits when
I'm watching films, looking for all those
people associated with it," says
theology student Christine Lawrance, who
played Edith, the girl who comes
screaming down the mountain when the
others disappear. Lawrance was only 13
when she was cast in the film, the
youngest on set, plucked for the role
from an open audition in Adelaide where
Weir and producer Patricia Lovell were
looking for old-fashioned faces.
"Weir didn't want modern-looking
girls," says Lovell, who still
produces and teaches at the Australian
Film Television and Radio School in
Sydney. "He had a great eye for the
right face." Lawrance, then
Christine Schuler, did not pursue an
acting career when she went home.
"Oh, school, university, dropped
out, life got in the way," she
laughs. She lives in Adelaide with her
husband and her eight-year-old son, who
is also a fan of the film. "It keeps
coming up, all the time, and people
suddenly make the connection," says
Lawrance. Now she wants to be an Anglican
priest. "If that doesn't happen,
I'll be a theologian and write terrible
erudite books that get up bishops'
noses." Karen Robson, the Sydney
girl who played the mysterious brunette
Irma, wanted to pursue acting after her
experience on that film, her first acting
role. "I went up for the role Judy
Davis got in My
Brilliant Career,
and when I didn't get that I thought I
didn't really want to [act] after
all," says Robson. But she hasn't
left the world of film behind. She's a
partner in the Los Angeles entertainment
law firm Pryor Cashman, specialising in
film finance, for productions as varied
as Sylvester Stallone's Cliffhanger
and Nick Nolte's Affliction.
With her husband, Iranian-born film
director Ramin Niami, she's just produced
an independent film, Paris.
(They also have two children, an
eight-year-old girl and a baby boy.)
While she hasn't worked on any of Weir's
American films, she has met him once or
twice since Picnic,
and she's still in touch with Patricia
Lovell. "I literally swam into
Russell Boyd eight years ago when I was
staying at the Chateau Marmont,"
says Robson. "I bumped him in the
water, and he looked up and said,
'Karen?"' Picnic
comes up all the time, says Robson.
"It follows my life. I was working
on a film in Germany, and when they found
out [she was in Picnic]
they were sending me photos to
autograph." There's one person
nobody has been able to track down -
Margaret Nelson, the girl who played the
role of defiant orphan Sara. David
Critchley has asked everywhere. Patricia
Lovell doesn't know where she is. None of
the cast or crew knows. Critchley tracked
down a Margaret Nelson working in film
production in LA - but it was the wrong
Margaret Nelson. Obviously a powerful
young actor even then, Nelson dropped out
of the industry long ago. She may well be
living happily somewhere in Sydney, but
she has disappeared from view.
"Margaret is the enigma," says
Critchley. "I'd love to trace her.
She did a fantastic performance in that
role."


 
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