A Son Is Born | |
---|---|
Directed by | Eric Porter |
Produced by | Eric Porter |
Written by | Gloria Bourner |
Starring | Ron Randell Peter Finch Muriel Steinbeck |
Music by | Sydney John Kay |
Cinematography | Arthur Higgins Damien Parer (war photography) |
Editing by | James Pearson |
Studio | Eric Porter Studios |
Distributed by | British Empire Films |
Release date(s) | 20 September 1946 |
Running time | 85 mins |
Country | Australia |
Language | English |
Budget | ₤10,000[1] |
A Son Is Born is a 1946 Australian melodrama
Contents |
In 1920, Laurette (Muriel Steinbeck) marries an irresponsible drifter, David Graham (Peter Finch). They have a son, David (Peter Dunstan), but later divorce due to David's drinking and infidelities. David chooses to stay with his father and Laurette marries again, this time to John, a rich businessman (John McCallum) with a teenaged daughter, Kay (Jane Holland). Years later Paul is killed in a car accident and David (now played by Ron Randell) comes to live with his mother, John and Kay. To get revenge on his mother for "abandoning" his father, David seduces Kay into marriage and abandons her, but realises the error of his ways serving in New Guinea during World War II. He is injured in battle but survives to be reunited with Kay, Laurette and John.
The script was written by Gloria Bourner, who was a cartoonist.[2] Eric Porter storyboarded the entire film prior to filming.[3]
Peter Finch, Ron Randell, Muriel Steinbeck and John McCallum were all well established actors when the film was made. Jane Holland was a 22 year old radio actor who later moved to England and married Leo McKern.[4] Kitty Bluett was a musical comedy star, the daughter of comedian Fred Bluett.[5]
The film was shot in the Supreme Sound System studio in early 1945. Filming was scheduled to allow the actors to take radio and stage jobs, and sometimes would start at midnight.[6] War footage shot by Damien Parer is used in the New Guinea sequences.[7]
The movie was shot prior to Smithy (1946), also starring Randell and Steinbeck, but its release was held off until after that bigger budget movie to take advantage of its publicity.
Critical response was mixed[8] although Ron Randell was mobbed by female fans at the film's premiere.[9]
Porter announced he wanted to make another film with Finch, a ₤35,000 suspense drama set in the timber country near Dorrigo and Coffs Harbour called Storm Hill, but it never eventuated.[10]