Sidecar Racers

Sidecar Racers
Directed by Earl Bellamy
Produced by Richard Irving
Written by Jon Cleary
Starring Ben Murphy
Music by Tom Scott
Cinematography Paul Onorato
Edited by Robert Kimble
Production
company
Release dates
  • 30 April 1975 (1975-04-30)
Running time
100 mins
Country Australia
Language English
Budget $750,000US[1] or $1 millionAU[2]

Sidecar Racers is a 1975 Australian film about an Australian motorcycle rider (John Clayton) who teams up with an American surfer (Ben Murphy).

Plot

Jeff Rayburn, an American surfer visiting Australia, gets involved in the world of sidecar motorcycle racing. He becomes friends with Dave Ferguson and the two of them form a champion team.

Cast

Production

Producer Richard Irving was a vice-president at Universal. He said he got the idea for making the film after attending a side car race in Sydney. He thought the sport "captured the Australian spirit . . . the sense of fun, a certain recklessness, energy and the desire to win" and wanted to make a film with the sport as a backdrop.[2]

Novelist Jon Cleary was hired to write the script, an original for the screen. He says Universal were keen to make lower budgeted films aimed at the youth audience in the wake of the success of American Graffiti (1973) - although he remains unsure why they picked him to write the script since he was in his fifties at the time. Cleary decided to make the lead character a former surfboard rider because of the aerobatic skills needed to be a sidecar racer.[1]

TV producer Richard Irving was meant to produce and direct but could not go to Australia due to an actors strike and directing duties were ultimately taken over by Earl Bellamy.[3]

Shooting began in March 1974 with race sequences shot at the Sydney Showground and Mount Panorama.[4] According to Cleary, Ben Murphy was troublesome during filming. "He wanted to rewrite the script, tell everybody how to act, how to produce it," the author says. "He was an absolute pain in the arse to everybody."[1]

Wendy Hughes, who played the female lead, later said she "didn't quite get on" with Murphy and claimed the director "was very efficient, but we didn't have any in-depth discussions about character. It was left up to me, mainly. Sometimes it worked; sometimes it didn't. I tried so hard."[5]

The movie was originally known as The Sidecar Boys.[6]

Reception

According to David Stratton, the film did "lacklustre business" on its release.[7] Cleary says that it sold well on television, however, in part because it went out on a package including The Great Waldo Pepper (1975).[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Jon Cleary Interviewed by Stephen Vagg: Oral History at National Film and Sound Archive
  2. 1 2 "U.S. PRODUCER TO MAKE $lm FILM IN AUSTRALIA.". The Canberra Times (ACT : 1926 - 1995). ACT: National Library of Australia. 17 January 1974. p. 17. Retrieved 18 October 2015.
  3. 'Irving Will Produce, Direct 'Sidecar Boys' ',Los Angeles Times 7 January 1974: d15.
  4. Andrew Pike and Ross Cooper, Australian Film 1900–1977: A Guide to Feature Film Production, Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1998, 431
  5. Richard Brennan, "Wendy Hughes", Cinema Papers, October 1982 p431
  6. "STUNTMAN ON THE BIKE TRACKS.". The Australian Women's Weekly (1933 - 1982). 1933 - 1982: National Library of Australia. 26 June 1974. p. 49. Retrieved 18 October 2015.
  7. David Stratton, The Last New Wave, Angus & Robertson 1980 p9
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