The ambiguities of ancestry: antiquity, ruins and the converging literary traditions of Australian gothic cinema

Journal Publication ResearchOnline@JCU
Craven, Allison
Abstract

‘Gothic’ is identified as a prominent mode of Australian cinema since the 1970s. In commentary on Australian Gothic films, ancestral influences in the aesthetics are often traced to literary conventions in colonial and pre-colonial British or European literatures. This article draws attention to the convergence of these literary and cinematic traditions and compares the prevalence of landscape as a Gothic figure in Australian films with the architectural elements of historical Gothic literature. The discussion proceeds through the British Gothic novel and its history as analogue of Gothic architecture of the time, and several recent accounts of ‘Australian Gothic’ cinema that invoke this history of the Gothic novel, and the dissonant description of ‘Australian Gothic’ in Susan Dermody and Elizabeth Jacka’s account of Australian Revival films. Two recent productions, Celeste (Hackworth 2019) and the television remake of Picnic at Hanging Rock (Rymer, Kondracki and Brotchie 2018) are compared as recent parodies of Gothic aesthetics that foreground architectural features of mise-en-scene over landscape. It is argued that while it is important to identify antecedents of contemporary cinema, that the colonial connotations of ancestry are ambiguous and potentially overpower attention to the generative visions in Australian Gothic filmmaking.

Journal

Studies in Australasian Cinema

Publication Name

N/A

Volume

14

ISBN/ISSN

1750-3183

Edition

N/A

Issue

3

Pages Count

16

Location

N/A

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Publisher Url

N/A

Publisher Location

N/A

Publish Date

N/A

Url

N/A

Date

N/A

EISSN

N/A

DOI

10.1080/17503175.2020.1845284