We acknowledge Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the Traditional Custodians of the land on which we work and live and give respect to their Elders, past and present.

Read our Statement of Reflection

Your Cart

Your cart is empty right now...

Discover what's on
Your Stuff
Lists
No lists found
Create list
List name
0 Saved items
Updated: a few seconds ago
Getting Started
Get started with Your Stuff

A free Your Stuff account allows you to save, list and share your favourite collection items and articles. This account will give you access to Your Stuff, NFSA Player and Pro. You will need to create an additional account for Canberra event tickets.

Confirm
Skip to main content
National Film and Sound Archive of AustraliaNational Film and Sound Archive
National Film and Sound Archive of Australia
National Film and Sound Archive
National Film and Sound Archive of Australia
National Film and Sound Archive

Harbour Bridge Hotel in 'Starstruck'

1982

Harbour Bridge Hotel in 'Starstruck'

1982

  • NFSA IDV10WZHYC
  • TypeFilm
  • MediumMoving Image
  • FormFeature Film
  • GenresMusical, Comedy
  • Year1982

Jackie (Jo Kennedy) returns home as a celebrity, having made the news as a tightrope walker, in a stunt set up by her cousin Angus (Ross O’Donovan). She entertains the bar at the Harbour View Hotel with a song, accompanied by her new friends, a band called The Wombats. Their smitten guitarist Robbie (Ned Lander) dances on the bar with her.

Note the Sydney Harbour Bridge iconography in the pub decor. This song was one of the most popular on the soundtrack. The Harbour View Hotel was a real Sydney pub, and remains so in a spectacular location in The Rocks.

Summary by Paul Byrnes.

This film was digitally restored and preserved as part of the NFSA Restores program.

Jackie (Jo Kennedy) returns home as a celebrity, having made the news as a tightrope walker, in a stunt set up by her cousin Angus (Ross O’Donovan). She entertains the bar at the Harbour View Hotel with a song, accompanied by her new friends, a band called The Wombats. Their smitten guitarist Robbie (Ned Lander) dances on the bar with her.

Note the Sydney Harbour Bridge iconography in the pub decor. This song was one of the most popular on the soundtrack. The Harbour View Hotel was a real Sydney pub, and remains so in a spectacular location in The Rocks.

Summary by Paul Byrnes.

This film was digitally restored and preserved as part of the NFSA Restores program.

  • Production company
    Palm Beach Pictures
    Producer
    Richard Brennan, David Elfick
    Associate producer
    Stephen MacLean
    Director
    Gillian Armstrong
    Writer
    Stephen MacLean
    Music
    Mark Moffatt
    Cast
    Max Cullen, Ross Donovan, Norman Erskine, Pat Evison, Kaarin Fairfax, Melissa Jaffer, Jo Kennedy, Ned Lander, Mango Lee, Dennis Miller, John O'May
  • Note the Sydney Harbour Bridge iconography in the pub decor. This song was one of the most popular on the soundtrack. The Harbour View Hotel was a real Sydney pub, and remains so in a spectacular location in The Rocks.

    Starstruck synopsis

    Teenage cousins Angus (Ross O’Donovan) and Jackie Mullens (Jo Kennedy) live in the Harbour View Hotel, beneath the Harbour Bridge in Sydney’s Rocks. Jackie is 18 and wants to be a singer; Angus is 14 and writes songs, while avoiding school and dreaming up wacky schemes to get his cousin noticed. The brewery wants to repossess the pub, so the teenagers set out to win a national talent contest, with a cash prize of $25,000.

    Starstruck curator's notes

    Starstruck is an energetic rock musical comedy, with a kitsch aesthetic – somewhere between a celebration of Australiana and an episode of the iconic 1970s TV rock show, Countdown.

    The script came from the collaboration of producer David Elfick and scriptwriter Stephen MacLean, who had worked together on GTK, the ABC’s ground-breaking rock music show, and at Go-Set, the music and surfing magazine. MacLean had grown up in a pub with various aunts, and thought it would make a good background for a story.

    The iconography is stridently Sydney, with Brian Thompson’s production design emphasising the then popular graphic possibilities of the Sydney Harbour Bridge (aka The Big Coathanger) at every opportunity. The musical members are very much influenced by the style of early 80s glam-rock video clips, as are the fashions. The antic style of comedy is also strongly influenced by the musical comedies made for The Beatles in the 1960s by Richard Lester (Help! and A Hard Day’s Night).

    Gillian Armstrong was very clearly aiming at a feminist revision of depictions of working class and/or masculine Australia. The pub is run by two strong women – Pearl and Nana, the grandmother of Angus. Most of the men who hang around the pub are no-hopers (like Angus’s father, who steals money from the safe) or Max Cullen’s Reg, who’s devoted to his pet cockatoo, Wally. A very funny sequence in a rooftop pool satirises the masculine image of Australian life-savers, in a gay water ballet, choreographed to look like a routine from an Esther Williams musical.

    All of this gaiety and colour somewhat obscures the film’s threadbare story-line, and lack of any dramatic tension – but audiences at the time were very receptive. The film was reasonably successful in Australia. It was cut from 105 minutes to 94 minutes for its US release, and remixed. This is the only version now available.

    Notes by Paul Byrnes.

Industry professional? Go Pro

Need to license this item? A/V professionals and researchers can shortlist licensing enquiries via our NFSA Pro catalogue search and membership.

Get started with PRO

Collections to explore

More in Stories+

Personalized your experience

Save, create and share

With NFSA Your Stuff