Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA groundbreaking drama set in an inner-city apartment block, tackling issues like racism, drugs, and homosexuality. It featured a multiracial cast and one of TV's first openly gay couples tr... Leggi tuttoA groundbreaking drama set in an inner-city apartment block, tackling issues like racism, drugs, and homosexuality. It featured a multiracial cast and one of TV's first openly gay couples treated as normal community members.A groundbreaking drama set in an inner-city apartment block, tackling issues like racism, drugs, and homosexuality. It featured a multiracial cast and one of TV's first openly gay couples treated as normal community members.
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Recensioni in evidenza
This story of love, hate and Nazism is perhaps one of the best films from Australia in a long time.
An 8/10 for Number 96.
As the movie is about the lives of the occupants of a block of flats in Paddington, the film is fast paced and holds your attention as you jump from a snippet of the life of one character to another which are all finally connected through various events at the flats. Apparently some viewers became so engrossed in the TV series that the makers received requests from viewers for a a flat at Number 96.
The show consisted of the interlocking stories of the various inhabitants of the apartment building: the gossiping Dorrie Evans (Pat McDonald), her hen-pecked husband Herbert (Ron Shand) and their flatmate Flo Patterson (Bunney Brooke), English battlers Alf and Lucy Sutcliffe (James Elliott and Elisabeth Kirkby), bumbling shop assistant Arnold Feather (Jeff Kevin), gay lawyer Don Finlayson (Joe Hasham), elegant fashion designer Vera Collins (Elaine Lee), shopkeepers Aldo and Vera Godolfus (Johnny Lockwood and Philippa Baker), the bitchy Maggie Cameron (Bettina Welch), wine-bar operators Les and Norma Whittaker (Gordon McDougall and Sheila Kennelly), the very camp Dudley (Chard Hayward) and many others.
The film is like a big-screen extended TV episode, and was popular on release with the show's many fans. The film did not include the show's most famous character, the sex-symbol Bev Houghton (Abigail) who had recently left the show, but Rebecca Gilling fills in as the 'bad girl' flight attendant Diana Moore, and she has the main nude scenes in the movie. Nowadays it's hard to see what all the fuss is about, with the corny humour and unbelievable plot twists, though some people like it because 'it's so bad it's good!'
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThere were said to be only five 35mm prints of the film, all blown-up from 16mm, which journeyed around Australia for screenings. This helps explain the slight 'soft-focus' feel and general scratchy quality of surviving prints.
- BlooperJoe Hasham did not appear naked on-set during his character's nude scenes. The camera is positioned slightly too low down during Don's post-beach shower, inadvertently revealing that he's wearing a pair of swimming trunks. They can be seen again later when he gets out of bed.
- Citazioni
Arnold Feather: In point of actual fact, if I may be so bold...
- Curiosità sui creditiThe 'epilogue' is prefaced with "Oh, what the Hell let's have a Happy Ending."
- ConnessioniFeatured in Not Quite Hollywood: The Wild, Untold Story of Ozploitation! (2008)
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- Number 96: The Movie
- Luoghi delle riprese
- 81-83 Moncur Street, Woollahra, New South Wales, Australia(Number 96 exterior)
- Azienda produttrice
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 53 minuti
- Mix di suoni