The Best of Friends (film)

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The Best of Friends
The Best of Friends film.jpg
Film poster
Directed by Michael Robertson
Written byDonald MacDonald
Produced by Tom Jeffrey
Starring Graeme Blundell
Angela Punch McGregor
Ruth Cracknell
Mark Lee
Release date
  • 1982 (1982)
CountryAustralia
Language English

The Best of Friends is a 1982 Australian romantic comedy about two best friends who have an affair one night, resulting in the woman becoming pregnant.

Contents

Cast

Production

The script won $10,000 in a competition by the New South Wales Film Corporation for best original quality. [1] Neville Wran presented the writer and director with the cheque. [2]

Angela Punch McGregor later claimed that:

It was an excellent script. It was then mutilated by all of us. [Writer] Donald McDonald was very upset about it. The film was badly handled and I was miscast but I took it because I wanted the challenge of doing a comedy, which I hadn't done before. I thought my role was well written and wasn't cardboard... The director wasn't up to it, the film was miscast, the budget wasn't good. [3]

Reception

Susie Eisenhuth in the Sun-Herald gave it 2 stars saying "Like so much Australian comedy, when the subject is sex, the script never chooses to laugh when it can snigger instead." [4] Geraldine Brooks of the Sydney Morning Herald writes "As a comedy, The Best Of Friends makes a great tragedy." and notes "brides at altars. If there is one new idea in The Best Of Friends, it must be suffering from acute loneliness." [5] The Age's Neil Jillett says that director Michael Robertson "shows no apparent control over Angela Punch McGregor and Graeme Blundell (Melanie and Tom) as they smirk, squawk, sneer and snigger their way to the film's predictable final scene, which is a very long time a'coming." [6] Writing in the Canberra Times Dougal McDonald remarks "if one takes the film as a homage to the cliche, it works very well indeed" and says "If there was a laugh in all of it that wasn't triggered by early warning systems, the film might offer some genuine mirth." [7]

Commenting in the Sydney Morning Herald about an abundance of water gags Richard Glover jokes "We know we are in for good laughs when the denouement of the movie is set on a harbourside beach. Cor, there it is before us — billions of litres of screamingly funny water, packed full of comic potential." [8]

The Sydney Morning Herald's Anna Maria Dell'oso says it "is a tedious but sometimes mildly funny exploration of the distinction between friends and lovers and all the grey areas in between." [9]

References

  1. David Stratton, The Avocado Plantation: Boom and Bust in the Australian Film Industry, Pan MacMillan, 1990 p109
  2. "A winner with his first film script". The Canberra Times . Australian Capital Territory, Australia. 7 February 1979. p. 21. Retrieved 3 June 2020 via Trove.
  3. Jim Schembri, "Angela Punch McGregor", Cinema Papers, December 1984 p 421
  4. Eisenhuth, Susie (28 February 1982), "Isn't he Alvin Purple?", The Sun-Herald
  5. Brooks, Geraldine (27 February 1982), "Entertaining drama beats a tragic comedy", The Sydney Morning Herald
  6. Jillett, Neil (5 March 1982), "For better, mainly for worse", The Age
  7. McDonald, Dougal (4 March 1982), "Homage to the cliche", The Canberra Times
  8. Glover, Richard (4 June 1986), "Water, water everywhere — ain't it a scream?", The Sydney Morning Herald
  9. Dell'oso, Anna Maria (27 March 1989), "The Best of Friends", The Sydney Morning Herald