Australia during COVID is largely a nation in
lockdown, some States worse than others, with State borders closed to travel,
or exemptive paperwork checked as you cross. The national death toll has now
exceeded 700, and the State that has suffered most is Victoria. The comedian Ross
Noble has commented that Australia is currently like a Spice Girls reunion –
everyone’s trying really hard, but Victoria keeps letting us down. Ouch…
The capital of Victoria is Melbourne, the one Australian
city that rivals Sydney in size and appeal, and probably exceeds it in
cosmopolitanism. With the city under curfew, the newspapers daily feature
disturbing photographs of the streets standing empty and bleak. The images
suggest the end of the world, but Melbourne has already been there. In the
movies.
These same streets were rendered deserted once before …by
Hollywood…for the filming of Stanley Kramer’s apocalyptic movie “On the Beachâ€
in 1959. The contemporary newspaper shots bear a chilly resemblance to the
production stills from that film. Did Hollywood get it right again? Was Stanley
Kramer more prescient than he could ever have believed?
A final shot in the movie - again filmed in a
Melbourne Street, outside the Victorian Parliament House from where today the
Premier fights a valiant battle against COVID - features a Salvation Army banner
reading “THERE IS STILL TIME…BROTHERâ€; while the usual overblown publicity
called it “The Biggest Story of Our Timeâ€, warning that “If you never see
another motion picture in your life, you MUST see ‘On the Beach’.†For once,
was the hyperbole deserved? Double Nobel prize-winning scientist Linus Pauling
said: “It may be that some years from now we can look back and say that ‘On the
Beach’ is the movie that saved the worldâ€. That’s some commendation.
Kramer was big on messages: “High Noonâ€, “Judgement at
Nurembergâ€, “Inherit the Windâ€, “Ship of Foolsâ€, “The Defiant Onesâ€, “Guess
Who’s Coming to Dinner†– yes, it’s a mad, mad, mad, mad world. “On the Beachâ€
was another of Kramer’s warnings, a more than appropriate one at a time when
the Cuban Missile Crisis was just around the corner.
“On the Beach†is a movie depicting the last days of a
dying world; dying from fallout caused by a nuclear war in the Northern Hemisphere.
It seems that some “horrible misunderstanding†launched such a war. “Fail Safeâ€
and “Dr Strangelove†were still to come; horrible misunderstandings, it seems,
were to become de rigueur as a means of triggering an apocalypse. After all, how
else would a nuclear war begin? Life in the North has largely disappeared. The
Antipodes have been untouched by the actual war, but guess what, folks…the
radiation is on the way, and death is inevitable. Hence those damning empty
streets, once cleared for filming, now eerily empty for real.
“On the Beach†was based on a novel by Nevil Shute
published in 1957. Shute was a British engineer who worked on the first British
airship and helped the Royal Navy develop experimental weapons for D-Day.
Following the old story of the insider being the one to see the dangers, he
soon began to warn the post-war world of the proliferation of nuclear weapons.
The scientist in the movie…one Mr Fred Astaire…yes, that one…explains: “The
devices outgrew us. We couldn’t control them. I know. I helped build them, God
help me.†The novel is prefaced by the now-familiar T.S. Eliot quote: “This is
the way the world ends…not with a bang but a whimperâ€. The theme, it seems, was
self-evident after that.
Shute had started writing adventure novels at night,
and was extremely prolific. While his style was highly criticised, he was a
top-selling author for some decades, remembering this is the era of such
prosaic but successful authors as Alistair MacLean. “On the Beach†is said to
have sold over four million copies world-wide, and is reputed to have knocked
“Peyton Place†from Number One sales position in the U.S. How did that happen?
Critic Gideon Haigh claims that with this novel “Shute had published arguably
Australia’s most important novel…confronting (an) international audience to the
possibility of…thermonuclear extinctionâ€. So what’s the Australian connection?
Post-war, Nevil Shute had visited Australia and saw in
it a place of greater refuge perhaps than war-torn Europe. He moved with his family
to Melbourne and proceeded apace with his literary career. Another best-seller
of Shute’s was “A Town Like Aliceâ€, the town being Alice Springs in the
Northern Territory. This was filmed in 1956 starring Virginia McKenna and Aussie
Peter Finch, and re-made as a television mini-series in 1981 with Bryan Brown
and Helen Morse. Incidentally, Bryan Brown also starred, along with his wife Rachel
Ward and Armand Assante (in the lead role), in the 2000 television series of
“On the Beachâ€. Brown played the Fred Astaire role of the scientist!
Kramer had a number of problems getting “On the Beachâ€
to the screen, not the least of which was Nevil Shute who disowned the
soft-soaping of such an important theme, and the immorality of the screenplay
with its suggestion of adultery. United Artists also saw problems, requiring
the film to be tamed for wider public consumption. There was, after all,
explicit reference to euthanasia as a major plot element, and though radiation
was the killer here, the film certainly avoids anything like nasty blistering
and any other physical deformity. The U.S. Navy was in no mood to supply the
nuclear submarine required for the film. A British diesel sub, HMS Andrew, on
loan to the Australian Navy, was dressed up for the part, while the Australian
Navy had no problem with allowing filming on board the aircraft carrier HMAS
Melbourne.