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Sunday, September 6, 2015

#1,847. Newsfront (1978) - Spotlight on Australia


Directed By: Phillip Noyce

Starring: Bill Hunter, Gerard Kennedy, Wendy Hughes



Tag line: "When the news ran out...they made their own"

Trivia: Much of the newsreel footage seen in the film is real, including the footage seen early on in which the cameraman was filming the Japanese sniper who killed him








Years before television news (or, for that matter, television itself), newsreels would play in theaters before each feature film and kept the masses informed, relating the noteworthy events that shaped their world both at home and abroad. Newsfront, the award-winning 1978 Australian film directed by Phillip Noyce, pays tribute to the brave men and women who documented the first half of the 20th century, often risking life and limb in the process.

The fact that the film also features interesting characters and an engaging storyline is a nice little bonus.

Starting just after World War II and taking us to the advent of television in the mid-1950s, Newsfront tells the story of the McGuire brothers: cameraman Len (Bill Hunter), an employee of the Cinetone Newsreel Corporation whose dedication to his job is unparalleled; and Frank (Gerard Kennedy), who left Cinetone to work for a rival company, a move that hasn’t exactly endeared him to Len.

Along with his new assistant Chris Hewitt (Chris Haywood), Len travels to the far corners of Australia, sometimes spending weeks away from home to capture the news of the day. While his hard work has consistently impressed his bosses, including Cinetone’s general manager A.G. Marwood (Don Crosby), Len’s demanding schedule is taking its toll on his marriage to Fay (Angela Punch McGregor), a devout Catholic who resents having to raise the couple's three children on her own.

As for Frank, he leaves both Australia and his longtime girlfriend Amy (Wendy Hughes) and sails to America, where he intends to break into the movies.

Over the years, Len visits many different areas, covering everything from a long-distance car race to a devastating flood, all the while realizing that a new invention, called television, will one day soon make cinematic newsreels a thing of the past.

Presented in both black & white and color (which reminded me of the saturated technicolor you'd find in the movies of the ‘40s and ‘50s, such as Douglas Sirk’s All That Heaven Allows), Newsfront flawlessly blends actual newsreel footage with a dramatic tale of an industry in decline, making it difficult at times to determine where the archival material ends and the film itself begins. A sequence where Len and Chris are covering the Maitland floods of the 1950’s is a prime example, with real-life images of the raging water interspersed with scenes of Chris rowing a boat through the flooded streets.

In addition to its authenticity, Newsfront features a number of outstanding performances, the most impressive of which is Bill Hunter’s strong yet understated portrayal of Len, the cameraman whose job means everything to him. Also good in supporting roles are Angela Punch McGregor as Len’s oft-suffering wife and Bryan Brown as Geoff, an editor at Cinetone and a Communist sympathizer whose political leanings make him something of an outsider in 1950’s Australia. And keep an eye out for Bruce Spence (Where the Green Ants Dream, The Road Warrior), who has a brief but memorable appearance as a driver whose vehicle meets with an unfortunate accident.

More than anything, though, Newsfront turns the spotlight on those individuals who, to report the news, occasionally put themselves in harm’s way. Among the real-life footage featured throughout the movie is that of a World War II battle between U.S. Marines and the Japanese, a segment shot by newsreel cameraman Damian Parer, who, while filming the skirmish in Sept. of 1944, was killed by sniper fire as his camera was still rolling. It’s a grim reminder of the dangers newsreel employees faced, and by presenting moments such as these, Newsfront ensures that, even all these years later, the sacrifices made by those who brought us the news will never be forgotten.







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