Tropical Gothic: Radiance Revisited

Directed by Rachel Perkins in 1998, Radiance is a film that deserves a sequel. The fates of Mae, Cressy and Nona after they head off up the road in Mae's old car is a cinematic mystery that intrigues me more the longer I live in North Queensland, the place in which both Radiance the film and it...

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Main Author: Allison Craven
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: James Cook University 2008-07-01
Series:eTropic: electronic journal of studies in the tropics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.jcu.edu.au/etropic/article/view/3431/3369
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spelling doaj-9d8667458c0349fe85576edcfc9ece292020-11-25T03:43:05ZengJames Cook UniversityeTropic: electronic journal of studies in the tropics1448-29402008-07-01710.25120/etropic.7.0.2008.3431Tropical Gothic: Radiance RevisitedAllison Craven0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7245-7734James Cook University, AustraliaDirected by Rachel Perkins in 1998, Radiance is a film that deserves a sequel. The fates of Mae, Cressy and Nona after they head off up the road in Mae's old car is a cinematic mystery that intrigues me more the longer I live in North Queensland, the place in which both Radiance the film and its antecedent, Radiance the play (Nowra 1993), are set. This essay does not attempt to investigate, much less solve this mystery, but instead deepens it by considering aspects of location, setting and narration in the film, which was co-scripted by Perkins and Nowra, as well as the process of transposition from play to film (Nowra 2003). Setting, used to realise the gothic aspects of the drama, marks the transposition between these otherwise similar versions of Radiance. Even local audiences fall for the film's mesmerising re-creation of the sub-region of North Queensland selected as a setting and in spite of minimal allusions even to Queensland in the dialogue. The house, the canefields, the beach and the island are 'regional sign systems' (Whitlock 1994) that present a convincing depiction of the place in which we dwell; some even say these features look familiar. Perkins (2003) tells how she set the film in Queensland to honour the setting of the original play, and she speaks of travelling to Queensland to gain the "atmosphere" of the place, and to choose locations. In fact, the locations chosen were far from North Queensland: Agnes Water, Rosedale, Childers, Bundaberg and Hervey Bay, as well as Max Film Studies in Sydney, while Nora Island "is a fabrication although some people swear they recognize it," says Nowra (2000, xiii). Radiance therefore comes to stand for the remarkable power of film to suggest a reality, and for the importance of location in telling a story on film.https://journals.jcu.edu.au/etropic/article/view/3431/3369cinemamysterynorth queenslandfilmfilm locationfilm settingfilm narrationgothiccane fieldsbeachislandhousetropical gothictropical cinemaaustralian cinemaindigenous cinema
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Allison Craven
spellingShingle Allison Craven
Tropical Gothic: Radiance Revisited
eTropic: electronic journal of studies in the tropics
cinema
mystery
north queensland
film
film location
film setting
film narration
gothic
cane fields
beach
island
house
tropical gothic
tropical cinema
australian cinema
indigenous cinema
author_facet Allison Craven
author_sort Allison Craven
title Tropical Gothic: Radiance Revisited
title_short Tropical Gothic: Radiance Revisited
title_full Tropical Gothic: Radiance Revisited
title_fullStr Tropical Gothic: Radiance Revisited
title_full_unstemmed Tropical Gothic: Radiance Revisited
title_sort tropical gothic: radiance revisited
publisher James Cook University
series eTropic: electronic journal of studies in the tropics
issn 1448-2940
publishDate 2008-07-01
description Directed by Rachel Perkins in 1998, Radiance is a film that deserves a sequel. The fates of Mae, Cressy and Nona after they head off up the road in Mae's old car is a cinematic mystery that intrigues me more the longer I live in North Queensland, the place in which both Radiance the film and its antecedent, Radiance the play (Nowra 1993), are set. This essay does not attempt to investigate, much less solve this mystery, but instead deepens it by considering aspects of location, setting and narration in the film, which was co-scripted by Perkins and Nowra, as well as the process of transposition from play to film (Nowra 2003). Setting, used to realise the gothic aspects of the drama, marks the transposition between these otherwise similar versions of Radiance. Even local audiences fall for the film's mesmerising re-creation of the sub-region of North Queensland selected as a setting and in spite of minimal allusions even to Queensland in the dialogue. The house, the canefields, the beach and the island are 'regional sign systems' (Whitlock 1994) that present a convincing depiction of the place in which we dwell; some even say these features look familiar. Perkins (2003) tells how she set the film in Queensland to honour the setting of the original play, and she speaks of travelling to Queensland to gain the "atmosphere" of the place, and to choose locations. In fact, the locations chosen were far from North Queensland: Agnes Water, Rosedale, Childers, Bundaberg and Hervey Bay, as well as Max Film Studies in Sydney, while Nora Island "is a fabrication although some people swear they recognize it," says Nowra (2000, xiii). Radiance therefore comes to stand for the remarkable power of film to suggest a reality, and for the importance of location in telling a story on film.
topic cinema
mystery
north queensland
film
film location
film setting
film narration
gothic
cane fields
beach
island
house
tropical gothic
tropical cinema
australian cinema
indigenous cinema
url https://journals.jcu.edu.au/etropic/article/view/3431/3369
work_keys_str_mv AT allisoncraven tropicalgothicradiancerevisited
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