From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mud, Bloody Mud
Directed byLindesay Dresdon
Written by Cliff Green
Based oncomic strip Bluey and Curley by Alex Gurney
Produced by Oscar Whitbread
StarringSimon Thorope
Tony Rickards
Production
company
ABC
Release date
1985
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish

Mud, Bloody Mud is a 1985 Australian television film based on a popular comic strip, Bluey and Curley. These comic book characters link documentary footage with puppets playing political figures. [1] The show mixed together actors as soldiers with actors in oversized caricture heads playing the likes of Robert Menzies, John Curtin, General MacArthur and General Blamey. [2] It aired on ABC in October 1986. [3]

The script was written by Cliff Green for the ABC. Green:

We had a very tight budget, very few actors, and no outside filming - so the whole thing was shot in-studio. The only real people in it - there is a narrator who is an army Medical Officer - he is the battalion M.O.; and there are two soldiers who are actually Bluey and Curly, the cartoon characters. And everybody else is puppets. So the politicians are puppets. And they are full-size - they are actually people but they are like those Sesame Street puppets... It was about the way the Australians were just sidelined by MacArthur, and left to rot in the jungles. And the dialogue was mostly Bluey and Curly jokes. And we got permission to use them from Sun News Pictorial and also from the cartoonist’s widow. And it had a tragic element because it is a story of a war, so to me it had to have a tragic ending. I would never try to do it again - it was a one-off in terms of its concept. I think nowadays, with animation and all that stuff, and computerisation, it wouldn’t be seen to be so unique. And it won an Award. They repeated it; they got a terrific response. They ran it on Anzac Day evening I think - and they got a fantastic response from RSL clubs and Old Diggers. And they ran it again on Armistice, the eleventh of the eleventh. So it was a real sort of “out of the box” piece of work - but great fun. [4]

References

  1. ^ Ed. Scott Murray, Australia on the Small Screen 1970-1995, Oxford Uni Press, 1996 p108
  2. ^ Hooks, Barbara (15 May 1985), "Slinging mud at an unnecessary war", The Age
  3. ^ Hooks, Barbara (24 October 1986), "ABC gambles with its own strategic exercise", The Age
  4. ^ Oral History with Cliff Green, Australian Writers Guild Archived 23 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine accessed 13 July 2013

External links


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mud, Bloody Mud
Directed byLindesay Dresdon
Written by Cliff Green
Based oncomic strip Bluey and Curley by Alex Gurney
Produced by Oscar Whitbread
StarringSimon Thorope
Tony Rickards
Production
company
ABC
Release date
1985
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish

Mud, Bloody Mud is a 1985 Australian television film based on a popular comic strip, Bluey and Curley. These comic book characters link documentary footage with puppets playing political figures. [1] The show mixed together actors as soldiers with actors in oversized caricture heads playing the likes of Robert Menzies, John Curtin, General MacArthur and General Blamey. [2] It aired on ABC in October 1986. [3]

The script was written by Cliff Green for the ABC. Green:

We had a very tight budget, very few actors, and no outside filming - so the whole thing was shot in-studio. The only real people in it - there is a narrator who is an army Medical Officer - he is the battalion M.O.; and there are two soldiers who are actually Bluey and Curly, the cartoon characters. And everybody else is puppets. So the politicians are puppets. And they are full-size - they are actually people but they are like those Sesame Street puppets... It was about the way the Australians were just sidelined by MacArthur, and left to rot in the jungles. And the dialogue was mostly Bluey and Curly jokes. And we got permission to use them from Sun News Pictorial and also from the cartoonist’s widow. And it had a tragic element because it is a story of a war, so to me it had to have a tragic ending. I would never try to do it again - it was a one-off in terms of its concept. I think nowadays, with animation and all that stuff, and computerisation, it wouldn’t be seen to be so unique. And it won an Award. They repeated it; they got a terrific response. They ran it on Anzac Day evening I think - and they got a fantastic response from RSL clubs and Old Diggers. And they ran it again on Armistice, the eleventh of the eleventh. So it was a real sort of “out of the box” piece of work - but great fun. [4]

References

  1. ^ Ed. Scott Murray, Australia on the Small Screen 1970-1995, Oxford Uni Press, 1996 p108
  2. ^ Hooks, Barbara (15 May 1985), "Slinging mud at an unnecessary war", The Age
  3. ^ Hooks, Barbara (24 October 1986), "ABC gambles with its own strategic exercise", The Age
  4. ^ Oral History with Cliff Green, Australian Writers Guild Archived 23 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine accessed 13 July 2013

External links



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