AustLit logo

AustLit

person or book cover
Script cover page (from the Crawford Collection at the AFI Research Collection)
form y separately published work icon Father and Son single work   film/TV   crime  
Issue Details: First known date: 1976... 1976 Father and Son
The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.

All Publication Details

      1976 .
      person or book cover
      Script cover page (from the Crawford Collection at the AFI Research Collection)
      Extent: 63p.
      (Manuscript) assertion
      Note/s:
      • The script is typed on thin white paper, labelled 'Code 11518' and 'Episode No. Sixteen' on the cover page. There is no indication on the cover page of to whom this copy of the script is designated.
      • The script is amended throughout with liquid paper that has then been typed over. As with other Bluey scripts, the amendments are at a copy-editing level: for example, on page 1, the stage direction 'PERHAPS THE SOUND OF A SMALL PART COMING FROM ONE OF THE SHIPS' has been corrected to 'PERHAPS THE SOUND OF A SMALL PARTY COMING FROM ONE OF THE SHIPS'. There are some adjustments to the stage directions on page 9, but it is more a rearrangement of material than adding any extra material.
      • Some of the content in the script (see, for example, pages 10 – 11) is marked with the pattern of brackets down the margin that indicates tentative content.
      • The script has been typed on at least two different machines.
      • The script includes background notes on the Cook Islands, details on the dialect of Maori spoken there, and a glossary of the basic Maori dialect terms used in the script.

      Holdings

      Held at: AFI Research Collection
      Local Id: SC BLU : 19
    • Melbourne, Victoria,: Crawford Productions ; David Stevens , 1977 .
      Extent: 47 min. 45 secs (according to the cover page)p.
      Series: form y separately published work icon Bluey Robert Caswell , Vince Moran , Everett de Roche , James Wulf Simmonds , Tom Hegarty , Gwenda Marsh , Colin Eggleston , David Stevens , Peter A. Kinloch , Keith Thompson , Gregory Scott , Peter Schreck , Denise Morgan , Monte Miller , Ian Jones , John Drew , David William Boutland , Jock Blair , Melbourne : Crawford Productions Seven Network , 1976 Z1815063 1976 series - publisher film/TV crime detective

      According to Moran, in his Guide to Australian Television Series, Bluey (and its Sydney-based rival, King's Men) 'constituted an attempt to revive the police genre after the cancellations of Homicide, Division 4 and Matlock Police'.

      Don Storey, in his Classic Australian Television, summarises the program as follows:

      Bluey is a maverick cop who breaks every stereotype image. He drinks, smokes and eats to excess, and therefore is rather large, but it is his unusual investigative methods that set him apart. He has bent or broken every rule in the book at some stage, to the point where no-one else wants to work with him. But he gets results, and is therefore too valuable to lose, so the powers-that-be banish him to the basement of Russell Street Police Headquarters where he is set up in his own department, a strategem that keeps him out of the way of other cops.

      Moran adds that 'Grills, Diedrich and Nicholson turned in solid performances in the series and the different episodes were generally well paced, providing engaging and satisfying entertainment.'

      The program sold well overseas, especially in the United Kingdom. But though it rated well domestically, it was not the success that the Seven Network had hoped for, and was cancelled after 39 episodes.

      Bluey had an unexpected revival in the early 1990s when selections from the video footage (over-dubbed with a new vocal track) were presented during the second series of the ABC comedy The Late Show as the fictional police procedural Bargearse. (The Late Show had given ABC gold-rush drama Rush the same treatment in series one.)

      Number in series: 19
Subjects:
  • Rarotonga, Southern Cook Islands,
    c
    Cook Islands,
    c
    South Pacific, Pacific Region,
X