Ghosts… of the Civil Dead explained

Ghosts... of the Civil Dead
Director:John Hillcoat
Producer:Evan English
Starring:David Field
Chris DeRose
Nick Cave
Dave Mason
Music:Nick Cave
Blixa Bargeld
Mick Harvey
Cinematography:Paul Goldman
Graham Wood
Editing:Stewart Young
Studio:Correctional Services
Outlaw Values
Runtime:93 minutes
Country:Australia
Language:English
Budget:A$1,680,000[1]

Ghosts... of the Civil Dead is a 1988 Australian drama-suspense film directed by John Hillcoat. It was written by Hillcoat, Evan English, Gene Conkie, Nick Cave and Hugo Race. It is partly based on the true story of Jack Henry Abbott.

Synopsis

The story is set in Central Industrial Prison, a privately run maximum security prison in the middle of the Australian desert. An outbreak of violence within the prison has resulted in a total lockdown. A committee is appointed by the prison's governors to investigate the cause of the outbreak, but their findings are in stark contrast to the facts behind the riot.

It is revealed that both the prisoners and the guards are slowly and deliberately brutalised, manipulated and provoked into the forthcoming eruption of violence by the government and the private company that runs the prison, in order to justify the construction of a new and more "secure" facility.

Production

The script was based on the book In the Belly of the Beast by Jack Henry Abbott and research done with David Hale, a former prison guard at Marion, Illinois. The film was shot at a disused aircraft factory in Melbourne[2] in October and November.[3]

Origin of title

See main article: Civil death. In Roman law, a person convicted of a crime where the punishment included loss of their legal rights as a person was civiliter mortuus, a person without civil rights.

Reception

Accolades

AwardCategorySubjectResult
AACTA Awards
Best FilmEvan English
Best Original ScreenplayNick Cave
John Hillcoat
Hugo Race
Gene Conkie
Evan English
Best Actor in a Leading RoleMike Bishop
Best Actor in a Supporting RoleBogdan Koca
Best EditingStewart Young
Best Original Music ScoreNick Cave
Mick Harvey
Blixa Bargeld
Best SoundBronwyn Murphy
Rex Watts
Peter Clancy
Best Production DesignChris Kennedy
Best Costume DesignKaren Everett
Beverly Jasper

Legacy

The spoken line "Welcome to Central Industrial. We are the future" has been sampled by Future Sound of London in their song "Central Industrial" on their Accelerator album;[4] also sampled by Woob in their song "Void, Part One" on the album em:t 0094,[5] and by Jam and Spoon in their remix of Moby's "Go".[6]

Sonic Subjunkies samples various parts of the film in their songs "Central Industrial" and "Central Industrial II: The Lockdown".

Therapy? opened the song "Nausea" (the first one on their 1992 album Nurse) with a sample of Nick Cave shouting "Here I am, motherfuckers!" in the film.

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. "Production Survey", Cinema Papers, September 1987 p. 67.
  2. David Stratton, The Avocado Plantation: Boom and Bust in the Australian Film Industry, Pan MacMillan, 1990 pp. 229–230
  3. Jillian Burt, Ghosts... of the Civil Dead, Cinema Papers, March 1988 pp. 8–11.
  4. Web site: The Future Sound of London . s107.net . 12 April 2014.
  5. Web site: Woob . s107.net . 12 April 2014.
  6. Web site: Moby . s107.net . 12 April 2014.