Early Frost is a 1982 Australian thriller film starring Guy Doleman, Jon Blake, Diana McLean and David Franklin.[2]
Plot
While gathering evidence for a divorce case, private detective Mike Hayes discovers a corpse. He suspects the death - officially listed as an accident - to be murder, but how, why and committed by who? The husband or the mistress?
The more Mike investigates, the more convoluted, complicated and sinister the situation becomes. Hayes meets David Prentice who keeps a scrapbook on violent crime and gets further information about the temperamental and schizophrenic Val Meadows, the mistress, and learns of her fears. She suspects that someone is trying to kill her. She has set her two sons off on a "Don't do as I do, do as I say" kind of existence, where mindless punishments are used as a substitute for love and understanding.
The wife, Peg Prentice, on the other hand, is too indulgent with her son David - accepting his disobedience - because he is the only adult in her life (her husband is constantly away on business).
A pattern begins to emerge as a photograph showing a number of women, including Val, is found. All the women in it suffered accidents - some fatal. Hayes's further investigations seem to indicate that the only people who hate Val enough to want her dead are her own family but even there, there is doubt.[3]
The number of mysterious accidents involving the deaths of all those women in suburban Australia, lead Val to suspect her son of mass-murder.[4]
Cast
- Diana McLean as Val Meadows
- Jon Blake as Peter Meadows
- Janet Kingsbury as Peg Prentice
- David Franklin as David Prentice
- Daniel Cumerford as Joey Meadows
- Guy Doleman as Mike Hayes
- Joanne Samuel as Chris
- Kit Taylor as Paul Sloane
- Danny Adcock as John Meadows
- Gerry Sont as Party Guest
Production
In 1974 David Hannay was working at Greater Union when he read a script by Terry O'Connor. Hannay was impressed and tried to raise funds for the film, and eventually succeeded through the company Filmco, run by Peter Fox and John Fitzgerald.[5][6][7]
Hannay tried to get Brian Trenchard-Smith to direct but he was busy and eventually hired New Zealand director Brian McDuffie.[8]
The movie was originally known as Something Wicked This Way Comes or Something Wicked but in order to avoid confusion with a Disney film of the same name the movie was retitled.[8]
Filming took place June to August 1981. McDuffie and Hannay clashed during the shoot and McDuffie was sacked on the day of the wrap party. McDuffie took his name off the film and no director is credited althogh Hannay and Geoffrey Brown are credited as "post production directors". The resulting movie has been called a representation of the worst kind of tax shelter film from the 1980s.[8]
David Hannay later recalled in 2005:
The reason The late Guy Doleman was cast was because twenty years earlier he had been my mentor when I was a young actor. I didn't do him any favours unfortunately... The original director was removed, and Geoff Brown (co-producer) and I did what we could to fix the picture. It is to this day the only Australian film to have no director's credit.[9]
Release
The film was never released theatrically.[10]
The movie was released on video in England in 1983.
The film was one of four movies made by Filmco that were part of a legal action in 1985. A judge ordered eight Sydney stockbrokers to repay at least $615,000 to which they borrowed in 1981 to finance four films by Filmco: Early Frost (budget $1 million), The Dark Room ($1.1 million), For the Term of His Natural Life ($4 million) and A Dangerous Summer ($2.9 million). The films were not box office successes and the stock brokers refused to repay the loans when they matured in November 1983.[11]
Reception
Rob Lowing of The Age felt the film "doesn't succeed in nmaintaining an edge" but that Blake was "worth watching."[12]
According to the website Hysteria Lives, "For much of its running time, Early Frost could have easily played daytime TV - and then a severed head is thrown into the mix. Its muddled result improbably explained by a script that pre-dated the slasher craze which was awkwardly - and pretty half-heartedly - retro-fitted to ape then popular trends. Early Frost is a mess, but is curiously compelling for those brave - or masochistic - enough to take a punt."[13]
References
- ^ a b Wilson, Malcolm (30 March 1985). "How film investors found themselves in a foxhole". The Sydney Morning Herald Good Weekend. p. 7.
- ^ "Production Survey", Cinema Papers, October 1982 p457
- ^ Panorama newspaper TV guide; 09/11/1987; page 15
- ^ Early Frost at BFI. Retrieved 24 June 2013
- ^ "No biz like film biz for Peter Fox". The Sydney Morning Herald. 13 June 1981. p. 42.
- ^ "TAX FIX NIX ON BIG PIX". Filmnews. Vol. 11, no. 6. New South Wales, Australia. 1 June 1981. p. 1. Retrieved 24 February 2025 – via National Library of Australia.
- ^ "Why The Big Stand-off?". Filmnews. Vol. 11, no. 9. New South Wales, Australia. 1 September 1981. p. 5. Retrieved 24 February 2025 – via National Library of Australia.
- ^ a b c David Stratton, The Avocado Plantation: Boom and Bust in the Australian Film Industry, Pan MacMillan, 1990 p272-274
- ^ Hannay, David (4 May 2005). "This is a producer's anecdote in response to viewer's comment". IMDB.
- ^ Ed. Scott Murray, Australia on the Small Screen 1970-1995, Oxford Uni Press, 1996 p49
- ^ Wilson, Malcolm (15 March 1985). "Brokers to repay Australian film loans". The Sydney Morning Herald. p. 19.
- ^ Blake, Jon (1 November 1998). "Movies". The Age. p. 136.
- ^ Kerswell, J.A. "Early Frost". Retrieved 22 February 2025.
External links
- Early Frost at IMDb
- Early Frost at Letterbox DVD
- Early Frost at Oz Movies
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