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3 to Go

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3 to Go
Title card
Directed byBrian Hannant ("Judy")
Peter Weir ("Michael")
Oliver Howes ("Toula")
Written byBrian Hannent
Bob Ellis ("Judy")
Peter Weir ("Michael")
Oliver Howes ("Toula")
Produced byGil Brealey
StarringMathew Burton
CinematographyKerry Brown
Edited byWayne Le Clos
Music byGrahame Bond ("Judy")
The Cleves ("Michael")
Rory O'Donoghue ("Toula")
Production
company
Distributed byBritish Empire Films
Release date
  • March 1971 (1971-03)
Running time
89 minutes
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish

3 to Go is an Australian portmanteau film consisting of three stories—Judy, Michael, and Toula—each presenting a young Australian at a moment of decision about their future.[1] The film was first shown on commercial television in March 1971 and episodes screened individually in cinemas as supporting shorts.[citation needed]

One of the stories, Michael, written and directed by Peter Weir,[2] went on to receive the AFI Award for Best Film.

Plot

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Young people and their personal concerns are the main theme of the three segments.[3]

Judy

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Despite the opposition of her parents and her boyfriend, Judy, a 19-year-old country girl, wants to move to the big city and leave her small town behind.[1][4] Judy finds life in Tamworth mundane. Her mother has concerns about her welfare, her unambitious country boyfriend Mike, and the daily routine. Her plan is to make her own life in Sydney, and she seeks advice from her work-friend Margie, and wishes her boyfriend was more like Margie's fiancé David. At the drive-in theater, showing a double-feature (Flaming Star and Garden of Evil), she informs Mike of her plans. He becomes disenchanted, failing to understand her motivations, and a few weeks later, after Judy searches for work in The Sydney Morning Herald, and with the help of her boss, the segment ends as she boards a train for Sydney and her new home is revealed: room 305.

Michael

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A young man, Michael, faces a choice between his wealthy middle-class parents and their middle class wealthy lifestyle and a group of radicals.[1][5] The episode starts with close-quarter battle scenes near Sydney Harbour, where radical Youth Quake rebels are fighting against soldiers. We then learn that this is only a film-sequence, and that everyday life is still normal, and meet Michael who is living with his parents, but working in the city. The scenes are intercut with an expert Youth Quake panel discussion (led by Neville Trantor), discussing topics such as sex and drugs. Trouble with Judy his girlfriend leads to a counterculture montage, and Michael becomes increasingly bored with his work routine and colleagues. At a pub, he befriends an actor from the film, Grahame, and Georgina his girlfriend, and begins to experience their freewheeling lifestyle. Family life becomes increasingly mundane as he begins to seek something more. He invites them to gatecrash Judy's 21st party, leading to trouble with his parents and a stronger sense of personal conflict.

Toula

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In it, a young Greek woman falls for an Australian man despite the opposition of her conservative Greek parents and family.[1][6] Toula lives in a row house in Sydney (within the Greek community) with her parents, grandmother, and younger brother Stavros, all of whom arrived in Australia 4.5 years ago. Toula and her best friend Assimina work at a clothes factory, and their families often meet and socialise together. Assimina has an Australian boyfriend, a university student named Rick, but she is unable to tell anyone except Toula about him—rumours however reach her brother Nick, which leads to a physical altercation in the house. Tension exists at Toula's house too, with Stavros, who is unemployed and listless, and his father's desire for him to go to university. As a community dance, she meets John—then the four go on a double-date to see Easy Rider in the theatre. Easter arrives, and the community celebrates a midnight mass with candles in the Greek Orthodox Cathedral of St. Sophia in Paddington, and the family head off home together.

Cast

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Judy

Michael

Toula

  • Rita Ioannou as Toula
  • Erica Crowne as Assimina
  • Andrew Pappas as Stavros
  • Joe Hasham as John
  • Gabriel Battikha as Nick
  • Ther Coulouris as father
  • Ketty Coulouris as mother
  • Yaya Laudeas as grandmother

Production

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Assistance was provided by the then Commonwealth Film Unit (now Screen Australia).[1] Michael was filmed in late 1969 on in black and white 16mm but blown up to 35mm; the other two films were filmed in early 1970 on 35mm.[7] The director of photography was Kerry Brown, and the producer Gil Brealey. It was distributed by British Empire Films.

Music

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The music for Michael was written and played by the Cleves, a New Zealand band popular in Sydney at the time,[8] and released in January 1970 as an EP called Music from Michael.[9] Released by Festival Records, the tracks were:

  • A1 – To-Day / Don't Turn Your Back / To-Day / Thirties / To-Day
  • A2 – Merivale / Whispers
  • B1 – Nowhere / Down on the Farm / Don't Turn Your Back

The music for Toula included "Mozart Chamber Music" edited by James McCarthy.

Reception

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The three segments in the trilogy had "relatively little thematic or stylistic connection", apart from what might be called an ulterior, "issue-based" motive to draw lessons about life in Australia, and a desire to patch together a feature film by using a portmanteau structure.[3]

Awards

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The second film, Michael, won the 1971 AFI Award for Best Film.[2][10]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e Hannant, Brian; Howes, Oliver (March 1971), Three to Go, Matthew Burton, Grahame Bond, Peter Colville, retrieved 7 January 2018
  2. ^ a b "New Australian Directors of the 1970s – The New Wave Directors". ozflicks. 7 January 2017. Retrieved 7 January 2018.
  3. ^ a b "3 To Go - Review - Photos - Ozmovies". ozmovies.com.au. Retrieved 7 January 2018.
  4. ^ "Judy - Review - Photos - Ozmovies". ozmovies.com.au. Retrieved 7 January 2018.
  5. ^ "Michael - Review - Photos - Ozmovies". ozmovies.com.au. Retrieved 7 January 2018.
  6. ^ "Toula - Review - Photos - Ozmovies". ozmovies.com.au. Retrieved 7 January 2018.
  7. ^ Andrew Pike and Ross Cooper, Australian Film 1900–1977: A Guide to Feature Film Production, Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1998 p254-255
  8. ^ "MILESAGO - Groups & Solo Artists - The Cleves". milesago.com. Retrieved 10 January 2018.
  9. ^ "Cleves". Discogs. Retrieved 10 January 2018.
  10. ^ "MILESAGO – Awards". Milesago. Retrieved 3 June 2012.
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