Sybylla Melvyn (Judy Davis) tells younger sister Gertie (Marion Shad) of her desire to escape a life of rural drudgery. Her frustrations increase when she’s sent to drag her father out of the pub. Summary by Paul Byrnes.
Good introduction of central themes: what horizons can a woman in 1898 Australia dream of? Note how she stops at the door of the pub – women are not allowed inside.
During the drought of 1898, headstrong and vivacious Sybylla Melvyn (Judy Davis) dreams of escaping the drudgery of farm life for a career as a writer. On an extended visit to her aristocratic grandmother (Aileen Britton), she meets Harry Beecham (Sam Neill), a well-to-do grazier. Sybylla must decide if love will interrupt her plans for a brilliant career.
My Brilliant Career introduced two startling new talents to the Australian public. It was the first feature of Australian Film Television and Radio School (AFTRS) graduate Gillian Armstrong, one of the first women to break into feature directing in the 1970s, and the first time most Australians had seen the astonishingly talented Judy Davis, who had recently graduated from the National Institute of Dramatic Art (NIDA), in Sydney.
The timing was perfect, as was the choice of subject. Miles Franklin’s semi-autobiographical novel, published in Edinburgh in 1901, was a ground-breaking feminist text from an earlier era that perfectly dramatised the concerns of many women in the late 1970s. The period setting only served to underline the idea that the dilemmas had not changed that much for modern women. Career or marriage was still a difficult choice, and Sybylla Melvyn presented a powerful role model – a feminist warrior, in the same year that produced a masculine fantasy in the road warrior, Mad Max.
Judy Davis’s performance is a large part of what audiences responded to – Sybylla’s blazing self–assurance, her courage and youthful anger, her refusal to settle for anything less than the moon. The film’s cinematography has great contrast – the flat, barren landscapes of the Melvyn family’s farm in the midst of drought gives way to green and verdant homesteads of the landed gentry.
Cinematographer Don McAlpine gives some of these scenes an impressionist look, emphasising the sense of privilege. Armstrong showed a great pictorial sophistication, a kind of visual sensuality. The film remains one of the high points of the 'new wave’ of Australian cinema in the 1970s and a leading influence on women who followed in film in the 80s and 90s.
Notes by Paul Byrnes
This clip shows Sybylla Melvyn (Judy Davis) at Possum Gully, the family farm, talking to her sister Gertie (Marion Shad) about her ambitions to escape a life of rural drudgery and to pursue a literary career, and then, as she milks a cow, bemoaning the lack of choices open to her. Her frustrations increase when her mother sends her to retrieve her father from the pub.
Education notes provided by The Learning Federation and Education Services Australia
This clip starts approximately 8 minutes into the feature.
We see Sybylla and her sister Gertie standing outside in the dark with their night gowns on.
Sybylla I want to do great things, Gertie, not be a servant. I hate this life. We should never have left the mountains.
Gertie It’s not father’s fault. You can’t blame him for the drought.
Sybylla Gertie, don’t you ever dream there’s more to life than this? Don’t you want to meet people who talk about books and words and have visions.
Gertie hugs the tree branch contemplating what Sybylla is saying.
Sybylla Gertie, I can’t settle for a new dress, a picnic now and then — living out in the bush for the rest of my life, I might just as well be dead.
Gertie Don’t say things like that!
Sybylla Why doesn’t mother understand? Why doesn’t anyone?
Gertie I think you’re the nicest, cleverest girl in the whole entire world.
Sybylla I’m not. I’m mad. It would be better if I didn’t think at all.
We cut to Sybylla milking a cow.
Sybylla (voice-over) There’s no use for me. I have no training, no money. I don’t even have time to study or practice. Just two states of existence — work and sleep.
Sybylla’s mother Sybylla!
Sybylla continues milking.
Sybylla’s mother Sybylla, why do you never answer when I call? I want you to fetch your father.
Sybylla stops milking the cow and looks up at her mother. Sybylla gets up quickly and hands the pail of milk to her sister Gertie and walks off back into the house.
Gertie It’s all right. I’ll do it.
Gertie sits down and starts to milk the cow. Sybylla’s mum looks back at Sybylla storming off.
Sybylla walks into a pub full of men.
Barman Looking for your dad are you? Just missed him. Left with the school master.
Man Blind leading the blind.
All the men in the pub laugh at the comment. Sybylla walks out of the pub, jumps onto a horse and carriage and drives off.
The National Film and Sound Archive of Australia acknowledges Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the Traditional Custodians of the land on which we work and live and gives respect to their Elders both past and present.