
Film editor Geoff (Bryan Brown) makes a political joke, and a statement, by tampering with a newsreel to make fun of the newly-elected Prime Minister, Mr Menzies. His conservative boss, AG Marwood (Don Crosby), is not amused. Summary by Paul Byrnes.
Interesting for the depiction of the post-production process on newsreels, and the heady political atmosphere in which they were made. The politicisation of the home and workplace, the way it was a real factor of daily life, is one of the film’s major themes.
In Australia in the late 1940s, before the coming of television, Len Maguire (Bill Hunter) and his young sidekick Chris (Chris Haywood) cover the big news stories for the Cinetone newsreel company. An old-school cameraman, Len is loyal to the company, the Australian Labor party and the Catholic church, but times are changing. He struggles to maintain his principles in turbulent times.
Newsfront is a classic, a contender for the best film ever made in Australia. It documents a period of intense social and political turmoil, personalising the propaganda wars of the late 1940s, the rise of Robert Menzies and a politicised Catholic church, and the beginnings of feminism in the workplace – all with extensive use of real newsreels.
The film’s most original technique is the way it integrates new and old footage, shifting effortlessly between black-and-white and colour, sometimes in the same scene. This gives the film great immediacy, a sense that history is alive in the present.
Off-screen, the production is famous for behind-the-scenes arguments between writer Bob Ellis, writer–director Phillip Noyce and producer David Elfick. After they made extensive cuts, Ellis removed his name from the credits, a decision he later regretted. A restored DVD release now includes commentary from all three, in which Ellis says he now recognises it as amongst the best work he has done.
Notes by Paul Byrnes
This clip shows the production team from the fictitious Cinetone newsreel company reviewing a newsreel that trumpets the electoral victory of the Liberal–Country Party coalition led by Robert Menzies. The clip uses black-and-white archival footage from a real newsreel within the fictional world of the film. Studio boss AG Marwood (Don Crosby) is unimpressed when a shot of a smiling and waving Menzies is successively repeated on the newsreel and lectures the film editor, Geoff (Bryan Brown), about his immaturity and the benefits of a Menzies Liberal–Country Party government.
Education Notes provided by The Learning Federation and Education Services Australia
A newsreel entitled ‘Democracy at Work: LIB–CP Coalition wins election; Menzies speaks’ plays on screen.
Newsreel narrator After eight years in office under the leadership of, first, Prime Minister Curtin and then Mr Chifley, the Australian Labor Party has been defeated at the polls by Mr Menzies’s new Liberal-Country Party Coalition.
Cinetone newsreel studio boss AG Marwood and several employees are previewing the newly-completed newsreel in a theatrette.
Chris (to Len) He looks like a big kangaroo, doesn’t he?
Newsreel narrator Mr Chifley seen here voting. Mr Menzies casts his choice.
Among the employees is film editor Geoff. On screen we see Menzies walking and waving to the crowd but the newsreel has been tampered with so that Menzies walks back and forth waving over and over. Geoff and his colleagues laugh.
AG Marwood You may think it’s funny. Stop it there will you Macca?
The lights come up.
Marwood I’m astonished at you Geoff for imagining that a piece of bad taste like that was worth your time, my disappointment in you, and the money I’m going to dock from your pay for the ingenious processing work.
Geoff Oh, come on!
Marwood Astonished. Absolutely astonished!
Len It was a joke, AG.
Geoff And something of a political statement.
Marwood Just because after nine years of well-nigh traitorous incompetence we now have a government capable of getting us out of the mess your friends got us into…
Geoff After the Brisbane line, you’re calling Chifley traitorous?
Marwood A government that maybe even will put the film industry back on its feet.
Len We’ve all heard that before.
Marwood Will you listen to me when I’m talking to you! I still have some authority around here.
Geoff We never said you didn’t.
Marwood In my day, people had respect for those who had the goodness to employ them when nobody else would.
Geoff sighs heavily and looks down.
The National Film and Sound Archive of Australia acknowledges Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the Traditional Custodians of the land on which we work and live and gives respect to their Elders both past and present.