- Chopper (film)
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Chopper
Theatrical release posterDirected by Andrew Dominik Produced by Michele Bennett Screenplay by Andrew Dominik Story by Chopper Read Starring Eric Bana
Vince Colosimo
Simon Lyndon
Kate Beahan
Bill YoungMusic by Mick Harvey Cinematography Geoffrey Hall
Kevin HaywardEditing by Ken Sallows Studio Australian Film Finance Corporation (AFFC)
Mushroom Pictures
Pariah Entertainment GroupDistributed by First Look Pictures Release date(s) 3 August 2000 Running time 94 minutes Country Australia Language English Chopper is a 2000 Australian film, written and directed by New Zealand film-maker Andrew Dominik and based on the semi-autobiographical books by Mark Brandon "Chopper" Read. The film stars Eric Bana as the title character, and co-stars Vince Colosimo, Simon Lyndon, Bill Young and David Field. It has a cult following.
Contents
Plot
In and out of jail since he was 16, Melbourne extortion man Mark Brandon Read (Eric Bana) kidnaps a judge to get his childhood friend, Jimmy Loughnan (Simon Lyndon), out of the notorious H Division of maximum security Pentridge Prison. He fails and is sentenced to 16 and a half years in the very prison in which Loughnan is serving his time. To become leader of the division, he ignites a power struggle which gains him more enemies than admirers. Eventually, even his gang turn their backs on him, and Loughnan stabs him. Read voluntarily has his ears cut off by a fellow inmate in order to be transferred out of the H Division; this also gains him recognition in and out of the prison.
He is released in 1986, revisiting enemies and friends whom he cannot differentiate anymore. He reunites with his former girlfriend Tanya (Kate Beahan), but suspects that she is involved with one of his old victims, Neville Bartos (Vince Colosimo). He tracks Bartos down, shoots him and takes him to the hospital, unabashedly claiming that he has a "green light" courtesy of the police "to exterminate scum". When Chopper learns that he is now the target of a contract, he goes after his old friend Jimmy, only to find him worn out by drugs, two children and a junkie fiancée.
He kills a criminal known as Sammy the Turk (based on real-life criminal Siam Ozerkam, whom Read allegedly killed) at a bar, but gets away with it by claiming it was self-defence. He eventually ends up in prison where he writes a book about his experiences in the underground crime scene in Melbourne. The book becomes a best-seller, and Read becomes a criminal legend and a cult figure.
The film ends with Read in his prison cell in 1992, watching himself being interviewed on television. He is proud of the interview among those watching with him, but when they leave he goes quiet, and the film ends with Read sitting in his cell alone.
Production
The biggest production difficulty was being allowed to use the Pentridge Prison in Coburg, Victoria for the shooting. The prison was being closed down and while the negotiations were underway, the funding for production was delayed. This put off the starting of the shoot.
To show the sterility of the prison and to contrast it with the world that Read encounters after leaving prison 16 years later, the production was split into two. The first part, filmed at the H Division of Pentridge Prison, one of the actual prisons that Read frequented, was as plain and sterile as could be, and all the scenes in the second part, taking place in 1986 were overly coloured, to achieve a paranoid and agoraphobic atmosphere, called "visual overload" by the director Andrew Dominik. This was attained by lighting, choice of film stock used and colours chosen for set decoration. Part one of the production ran from 3 May until 26 May with part two continuing from 28 June until 21 July 2000.
Some extras were hired from former inmates and tattoo parlors. Bana spent two days with Read to gain an insight into the role he was to play, and many of Read's friends, enemies, and old associates were interviewed.
Reception
Reviews
Chopper was received with positive reviews. Review-based rating site Rotten Tomatoes gave the film a 71 percent "Fresh" rating.[1] Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film 3 stars out of 4, praising Eric Bana for his performance, saying "He has a quality no acting school can teach and few actors can match".[2]
Reaction from Mark "Chopper" Read
Read himself suggested that Bana play him, after seeing the actor in the sketch comedy series Full Frontal. Bana spent two days living with Read to help him practice for the role. Read later praised Bana's performance on the 20 to 1 episode Great Aussie Films, where Chopper came 17th. Several of Bana's meetings with Read can be viewed in the DVD Special Features.
Awards and nominations
Awards won
- Australian Film Institute (AFI) (2000):
- Best Achievement in Direction: Andrew Dominik
- Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role: Eric Bana
- Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role: Simon Lyndon
- IF Awards (2000)
- Best Actor: Eric Bana
- Best Independent New Filmmaker: Andrew Dominik
- Stockholm Film Festival (2000)
- Best Actor: Eric Bana
- Cognac Festival du Film Policier (2001)
- Critics Award: Andrew Dominik
- Grand Prix Award: Andrew Dominik
- Film Critics Circle of Australia (FCAA) (2001):
- Best Male Actor: Eric Bana
- Best Director: Andrew Dominik
- Best Film
- Best Male Supporting Actor: Simon Lyndon
Awards Nominated
- Australian Film Institute (AFI) (2000):
- Best Achievement in Cinematography: Geoffrey Hall, Kevin Hayward
- Best Achievement in Editing: Ken Sallows
- Best Achievement in Production Design: Paddy Reardon
- Best Achievement in Sound: Frank Lipson, Glenn Newnham, Steve Burgess, John Schiefelbein
- Best Film: Michele Bennett
- Best Original Music Score: Mick Harvey
- Best Screenplay Adapted from Another Source: Andrew Dominik
- Stockholm Film Festival (2000)
- Bronze Horse Award: Andrew Dominik
- British Independent Film Awards (BIFA) (2001):
- Best Foreign Independent Film
- Film Critics Circle of Australia (FCAA) (2001):
- Best Cinematography: Kevin Hayward, Geoffrey Hall
- Best Editing: Ken Sallows
- Best Music Score: Mick Harvey
- Best Screenplay: Andrew Dominik
- Best Female Supporting Actor: Kate Beahan
Music
- Don't fence Me In - Frankie Laine
- Black & Blue - Chain
- Sweet Love - Renee Geyer
- Bad Boy for Love and Stuck On You - Rose Tattoo
- Forever Now - Cold Chisel
- Release the Bats - The Birthday Party
- Senile Dementia - The Saints
- Ever Lovin' Man - The Loved Ones
See also
References
- ^ "Chopper". Rotten Tomatoes. http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/chopper/. Retrieved 2009-06-07.
- ^ Roger Ebert. ""Chopper"". Chicago Sun-Times. http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20010601/REVIEWS/106010302/1023.
External links
- Official website
- Chopper at the Internet Movie Database
- Chopper at AllRovi
- BBC interview with Eric Bana on his role in Chopper.
- Chopper at the National Film and Sound Archive
Films directed by Andrew Dominik Chopper (2000) · The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford (2007) · Cogan's Trade (2012)Categories:- Australian films
- English-language films
- 2000 films
- 2000s comedy films
- 2000s crime films
- 2000s drama films
- Australian comedy films
- Australian drama films
- Biographical films
- Black comedy films
- Crime drama films
- Criminal comedy films
- Directorial debut films
- Films based on biographies
- Films about organised crime in Australia
- Films set in the 1980s
- Films shot in Melbourne
- Films set in Melbourne
- Prison films
- Vigilante films
- Films directed by Andrew Dominik
- Australian Film Institute (AFI) (2000):
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