Thursday, 8 March 2018
941 Bangkok Hilton
First viewed : 20 April 1990
Another probable result of the VCR is an increase in the number of series seen from start to finish. This is a good example.
Bangkok Hilton was a three part Australian mini-series weaving an intriguing tale from three elements, a family drama , a wartime scandal and a modern day drug smuggling story. With the benefit of three outstanding actors in the lead roles, it was great entertainment although highly implausible.
Denholm Elliott played Harold Stanton, a disgraced ex-army man cast adrift by his family after the Second World War and living out his days as an alcoholic on an allowance in Bangkok. In the sixties he had worked as a lawyer in Sydney under an assumed name and managed to impregnate a wealthy client before his identity was discovered. Twenty years later his daughter Katrina ( Nicole Kidman ) comes looking for him but en route she meets a handsome American Arkie ( Jerome Ehlers ) who befriends young girls to use them as unwitting drug mules. Persuaded to travel via Bangkok ( hard to believe a drug dealing scumbag would agree to a change in schedule so easily ) he abandons her to be caught at the airport with the drugs and she is incarcerated in a notorious city prison with the threat of a death sentence on the way. The family lawyer Richard Carlisle ( Hugo Weaving ), persuades Stanton, now known as Bill, that he must help save her which he agrees to while keeping his identity secret. This is another plothole since Katrina would have to be awesomely dim not to connect "Bill" with what she knows about her father ; it's a great credit to Kidman and Elliott's skills that they manage to carry off the revelatory scene and make it moving.
I was drawn to the series by Kidman, having seen her in Dead Calm at the pictures a few months earlier but I found it all absorbing with the added bonus of some genuinely tense scenes and a sad sub-plot about the fate of two less well-connected Aussie mules who end up perforated in the prison yard.
Kidman and Weaving of course went on to Hollywood fame and fortune but for Elliott, this was pretty much his final triumph before his AIDS-related death in 1992.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
I seem to remember Elliot's role in the Indiana Jones films getting a nod in the horror-show of a fourth film... Sean Connery doubtless thanks fate that he either declined or was not offered a chance to come back as Indy's father.
ReplyDelete