“May You Dream of the Devil, and…”
Arrow are giving us a welcome 4K restoration on separate UHD and Blu-ray releases, of Ted Kotcheff’s masterful adaptation of Kenneth Cook’s novel.
It’s a pretty faithful adaptation as well, following the novel’s plot of teacher John Grant (Gary Bond) who works in a school in the middle of Nowhere, Australia, finishes up for the holidays and heads off to Sydney to be with his girlfriend. Unfortunately he makes the fatal mistake of stopping off in the mining town of Bundanyabba and the even more fatal mistake of having a few drinks and a bit of a gamble, the result being he loses all his money.
Where WAKE IN FRIGHT scores all the points, however, is in how it portrays what happens next, with the new ‘friends’ John has made not caring a jot that he has no money and instead happy to involve him in the endless rounds of drinking, fighting and kangaroo hunting that make up their lives. And it’s not long before John finds it incredibly easy to just slip into that lifestyle as well, perhaps permanently.
WAKE IN FRIGHT boasts excellent performances, not just from Bond (a career high) but from the actors playing the inhabitants of ‘The Yabba’, especially Donald Pleasence as a burned-out doctor. The harsh Australian vistas look even more bleached in 4K and cautious viewers should be warned that the kangaroo-hunting sequence is intact.
Arrow’s release gives us a lot more extras than Eureka’s Blu-ray of ten years ago. The commentary with director Ted Kotcheff and editor Anthony Buckley has been ported over, and we get a brand new second commentary by Peter Galvin, who wrote the book detailing the making of the film. There’s also a look at the film’s Broken Hill locations (an impressive 50 minutes), an interview with sound editors Keith Palmer and Eddy Joseph (15 minutes), and a profile of Donald Pleasence from Kim Newman (15 minutes).
Director Philippe Mora discusses the film with Paul Harris for 20 minutes, there’s a new interview with cinematographer Brian West (21 minutes) and archival interviews with Ted Kotcheff (13 minutes) and actor Jack Thompson (7 minutes), as well as archival audio interviews with Kotcheff (a whopping 130 minutes) and composer John Scott (16 minutes). We also get Kotcheff’s Q&A from the 2009 Toronto Film Festival (46 minutes), alternate scenes from the UK & US version titled OUTBACK (11 minutes), a 1971 TV segment on the film (6 minutes) and another from 2009 on the film’s rediscovery (7 minutes), an obituary for actor Chips Rafferty (3 minutes), trailers and an image gallery. There’s also a fascinating 38 minute trailer reel of Australian films like THE SUNDOWNERS and WALKABOUT, all made by overseas film-makers. The disc also comes with a collector’s booklet featuring new writing on the film.
Ted Kotcheff’s WAKE IN FRIGHT is out in 4K in separate UHD and Blu-ray editions on Monday 29th June 2026