Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Weekend of Shadows

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
6.8
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron
6.8
1 Ratings
100
90
80
70
61
50
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This

Director
  
Tom Jeffrey

Duration
  

Screenplay
  
Peter Yeldham

Country
  
Australia

6.6/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Crime, Drama

Running time
  
1h 35m

Story by
  
Hugh Atkinson

Language
  
English

Weekend of Shadows movie poster

Release date
  
12 April 1978

Based on
  
novel The Reckoning by Hugh Atkinson

Writer
  
Hugh Atkinson (novel), Peter Yeldham

Initial release
  
April 12, 1978 (Australia)

Cast
  
John Waters
(Rabbit),
Bill Hunter
(Bosun),
Melissa Jaffer
(Vi),
Wyn Roberts
(Sergeant Caxton),
Graham Rouse
(Ab Nolan),
Graeme Blundell
(Bernie)

Similar movies
  
Tom Jeffrey directed Weekend of Shadows and The Odd Angry Shot

Weekend of Shadows is a 1978 film directed by Tom Jeffrey.

Contents

Weekend of Shadows movie scenes

Plot

Weekend of Shadows Weekend of Shadows

In the 1930s, a farmer's wife in a small town is murdered. Suspicion falls on a Polish labourer and a posse is formed to catch him.

Cast

Weekend of Shadows wwwozmoviescomaufilesweekendofshadowsnovel

  • John Waters ... 'Rabbit'
  • Melissa Jaffer ... Vi
  • Wyn Roberts ... Sergeant Caxton
  • Graham Rouse ... Ab Nolan
  • Graeme Blundell ... Bernie Collins
  • Bill Hunter ... Bosun
  • Bryan Brown ... Bennett
  • Production

    Writer Peter Yeldham later called the film a "real disaster... we had constant changes and insecurity about it, right up to the day of shooting. I think many of these changes didn't help the film."

    Shooting commenced in July 1977 in Macclesfield in the Adelaide Hills. The film was a commercial disappointment. Director Tom Jeffrey:

    I screened the film to Hugh Atkinson, the writer of the novel, after we had finished it and he came up to me afterwards and I remember him saying quite clearly, "You've got it." I said, "What do you mean?" He said, "You understand the ending." And I still didn't know whether I had it right, whether I was on his wavelength, and I said, "Please explain, Hugh." And he said, "It's about the Crucifixion." And I said, "Yes, well, I didn't really realise that, but if you can see that in the ending and if that's what your original intention was and I've unwittingly achieved that for you, I'm very pleased.".. The film was actually looking at the power of the group and how it can get out of hand.

    References

    Weekend of Shadows Wikipedia
    Weekend of Shadows IMDb Weekend of Shadows themoviedb.org