Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

The Mango Tree (film)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
7.2
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron7.2
7.2
1 Ratings
100
90
80
71
60
50
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This

Director
  
Kevin James Dobson

Music director
  
Duration
  

Language
  
English

7/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Drama

Screenplay
  
Country
  
Australia

The Mango Tree (film) movie poster

Release date
  
13 December 1973

Based on
  
novel by Ronald McKie

Writer
  
Ronald McKie (novel), Michael Pate

Initial release
  
December 16, 1977 (Australia)

Cast
  
(Professor),
Christopher Pate
(Jamie Carr), (Grandma Carr), (Miss Pringle), (Preacher Jones)

Similar movies
  
Related Kevin James Dobson movies

Diana coupland dr no 1962 under the mango tree


The Mango Tree is a 1977 Australian drama film directed by Kevin Dobson and starring Geraldine Fitzgerald and Sir Robert Helpmann. Lead actor Christopher Pate is the son of actor Michael Pate who also produced the film.

Contents

The Mango Tree (film) wwwgstaticcomtvthumbmovieposters38885p38885

Luiz bonfa don burrows the shade of the mango tree


Plot

The film is about Jamie, a young man in his formative teen years, growing up in rural subtropical town of Bundaberg, Queensland, Australia, set around World War I. Jamie, raised by this grandmother, enjoys his life in "Bundy", until the town's reaction to the insanity of a local preacher leads him to leave his hometown for life in the city.

Cast

  • Christopher Pate as Jamie Carr
  • Geraldine Fitzgerald as Grandma Carr
  • Robert Helpmann as the Professor
  • Gerard Kennedy as Preacher Jones
  • Gloria Dawn as Pearl
  • Carol Burns as Maudie Plover
  • Barry Pierce as Agnus McDonald
  • Diane Craig as Miss Pringle
  • Ben Gabriel as Wilkenshaw
  • Gerry Duggan as Scanlon
  • Jonathan Atherton as Stinker Hatch
  • Tony Bonner as Captain Hinkler
  • Tony Foley as Private Davis
  • Tony Barry as Tommy Smith
  • Terry McDermott as Somers
  • Production

    Michael Pate was a neighbour of Robert McKie, who wrote the novel. Pate optioned it and tried to find a writer to adapt it into a screenplay but ended up doing it himself. The budget was raised from the Australian Film Commission, GUO Film Distributors and the Bundaberg Sugar Company; the latter invested a third of the total sum. The budget was originally $650,000 but production of the film was delayed by 12 months by which time inflation meant it had risen to $800,000.

    Michael Pate originally wanted to direct the film himself but the AFC did not want him to write, produce and direct, so insisted he find a director. Pate proposed Michael Lindsay-Hogg, son of Geraldine Fitzgerald, who was unable to do it. Bruce Beresford almost directed until the South Australian Film Corporation, who had the director under contract, intervened and prohibited him from making it. Then in February 1977, two months before shooting was to begin, Pate hired Kevin Dobson.

    Filming took place in the town of Gayndah, Mount Perry and Cordalba as well as Bundaberg. The shoot went for seven weeks starting April and ending in June.

    Release

    The Mango Tree enjoyed reasonable success, grossing $1,028,000 at the box office in Australia, which is equivalent to $4,728,800 in 2009 dollars.

    Critical reaction was muted, with much criticism falling on the performance of Christopher Pate. However film writer Brian McFarlane later wrote that Geraldine Fitzgerald gave "one of the most luminous performances by an actress in Australian film." The movie achieved only limited sales overseas.

    Kevin Dobson later claimed he felt that the script was never quite right and "one or two performances were a little shonky" but that he has great affection for the movie. There are several different edits of the film available, one by Dobson, one by Pate.

    References

    The Mango Tree (film) Wikipedia
    The Mango Tree (film) IMDb The Mango Tree (film) themoviedb.org