
Now the English cricket captain, Douglas Jardine (Hugo Weaving) is determined to return from the upcoming Australian tour with the Ashes. He’s obsessed with the batting of Donald Bradman (Gary Sweet) and determined to discover his weaknesses. He talks to the gentlemen amateur, Allen (John Doyle) who suggests he should ask one of the English bowlers, so Jardine travels north to a Yorkshire coal mining town to talk to the fast bowler, Harold Larwood (Jim Holt), just cleaning up after a day at the coalface. Jardine quizzes Larwood about his experiences as the bowler who has most often come up against Bradman. Summary by Janet Bell.
Hugo Weaving is marvellous in the role of Douglas Jardine, the obsessive and rigidly formal gentleman cricketer whom we meet with his friends and colleagues of the English cricketing fraternity, Lord Harris (Frank Thring), Pelham Warner (Rhys McConnochie), Percy George Fender (John Gregg) and Jardine’s gentleman team-mate, Allen (John Doyle). They are sitting in a splendid library being served drinks by the butler, while discussing the finer points of the game. Their world is a far cry from the deepening economic depression that has sent the western world into a crisis of unemployment and rising prices.
And, to remind us of the real world, this scene contrasts sharply with the next in which Jardine travels to a Yorkshire coalmining town to talk to one of the world’s fastest bowlers, his teammate Harold Larwood (Jim Holt) who calls him Mr Jardine. Jardine calls him Harold. The contrast between the two worlds couldn’t be more pronounced.
In the summer of 1932-33, three men of Empire – the brilliant young Australian batsman Donald Bradman (Gary Sweet), the gentleman English captain Douglas Jardine (Hugo Weaving) and the Yorkshire coal miner and fast bowler Harold Larwood (Jim Holt) – would play to enormous crowds across Australia, in the 'Bodyline’ test series – so called because of the bowling tactics of the English team. This controversial test series threatened the traditional ties between Australia and the 'mother’ country and changed the game of cricket forever.
Bodyline tells the story of a test series in which the English Captain, Douglas Jardine, instructed his speed bowlers, including the fast bowler Harold Larwood, to bowl at the upper body of the Australian batsmen. This increased the chances of a defensive reaction, which would either expose the wicket or give an easy catch to the fieldsmen. The English team had lost the Ashes to Australia the previous year and Jardine was determined to break the winning streak of Australia’s star batsman, Donald Bradman.
It was the height of the worldwide economic depression and as the dole queues swelled and the despairing men took to the road to find work to keep their families housed and fed, sport – especially the British Empire game of cricket – became one of their few distractions. Kennedy Miller tells the bodyline story as the Greeks and Romans told the myths and legends of their great warrior heroes. The heroes in this case being three larger than life cricketing greats and their epic struggle to win the Ashes for their country. Through the telling of this extraordinary story, we learn a great deal about the changing nature of cricket, the stultifying hand of the cricketing bureaucracy and the character of the players who were determined to give their all for their team mates, their captain and their country.
Notes by Janet Bell
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.