Silent Reach is a 1983 Australian mini series based on the novel by Osmar White.[1]

Silent Reach
Genremini-series
Written byTed Roberts
Directed byHoward Rubie
StarringRobert Vaughn
Helen Morse
Graham Kennedy
Country of originAustralia
Original languageEnglish
No. of episodes2
Production
ProducerJill Robb
Running time2 x 150 mins
Original release
NetworkNetwork Nine
Release2 March 1983 (1983-03-02)

Premise edit

Conwright Industries, a huge mining company, hire American intelligence agent Steve Sinclair, to investigate a series of sabotage incidents.

Cast edit

Production edit

Osmar White's novel was published in 1979. It was based on research trips White had taken to Queensland and Western Australia. The novel was published in the US, UK and Australia. It was White's tenth book and second novel.[2]

Film rights were bought in 1980 by AAV Productions, a subsidiary of David Syme & Co. Producer Jill Robb who announced they would make an eight part television series.[3] It eventually became a five hour project.

Robb could not initially get an Australian network interested in the project. She raised finance from Postwork Newsweek Stations in the USA along with the Queensland Film Corporation, the AFC and a consortium of private investors. This enabled her to finance the mini series which she sold to the Nine Network.[4]

The project was known during filming as The Alcheringa Stone.[5] The shoot took place in 1981 in Queensland, with location work in Brisbane, Chatsworth (south of Mt Isa), and Maryborough.[4]

Reception edit

The mini-series was considered a ratings disappointment.[6]

The Age said the mini series had "a lot going for it" saying the script and direction "are above the middlebrow soapie level... it looks good and is full of incident"[7]

References edit

  1. ^ Ed. Scott Murray, Australia on the Small Screen 1970-1995, Oxford University Press, 1996 p235.
  2. ^ "Diamonds turn up trumps". The Age. 17 February 1979. p. 21.
  3. ^ "AFC puts up money for spy thriller". The Age. 1 April 1980. p. 2.
  4. ^ a b Courtis, Brian (15 August 1981). "Vaughn free: the making of a TV saga". The Age. p. 25.
  5. ^ "Too current for comfort". The Age. 25 August 1981. p. 2.
  6. ^ Lewes, Jacqueline Lee (5 June 1983). "Million$ of Viewing". Sydney Sun Herald. p. 47.
  7. ^ "The countryside steals the show". The Age. 2 March 1983. p. 2.

External links edit