For many Australians, the 鈥榩ool room鈥 is a symbolic repository of cherished objects, and to have a gift bequeathed to this room is a compliment of the highest order. If the gift stays in its packaging, even better.
Aussies were introduced to the pool room by way of The Castle 鈥 the 1997 film directed and co-written by Rob Sitch (TC 1980) that encapsulated the endearing narrative of a 鈥榯ypical鈥 Australian family, who had little but more than enough. It underscored a moment in time when rissoles were trendy and the Trading Post ruled (even if many of the goods it was flogging were overpriced), while highlighting the abiding principle that a home is more than a house.
The movie captured a certain suburban innocence, like that of a child before discovering their parents have flaws. 鈥業t was the realisation that a really fertile time for anecdotes came from around the age of 10-14,鈥 says Rob, of the simple idea that led to the creation of what is one of the most iconic Australian films of all time.
Told through the eyes of Dale Kerrigan, played by a young Stephen Curry, the movie was inspired by the childhood memories of the Working Dog team 鈥 Rob and his wife Jane Kennedy, Tom Gleisner and Santo Cilauro. 鈥楾he setting came from visiting my cousins who lived close to the house in the movie [next to Essendon Airport]. As an aviation buff, I genuinely thought they were the luckiest family in the world,鈥 says Rob, reflecting on the inner-thoughts of his 10-year-old self.
The fact that the private lexicon of the scriptwriters 鈥 also drawn from childhood 鈥 was suddenly inaugurated into the Australian vernacular upon The Castle鈥檚 release is something Rob says was one of the unexpected joys of the film. (Most Australians have noted the serenity of their surrounds at least once in their life.)
鈥楾he only line I was certain would catch on was 鈥淚t鈥檚 the vibe鈥,鈥 says Rob. 鈥業t seems such a silly way to decide constitutional law, but I鈥檒l bet when those justices get to the end of their deliberations and still can鈥檛 decide, 鈥渢he vibe鈥 can鈥檛 be far away.鈥
The first draft of the film鈥檚 script was written in two weeks (鈥榯hough we鈥檙e famous re-drafters,鈥 says Rob); filming took even less time. 鈥楾he week before we had a full read-through with the cast and it was close to the most enjoyable 90 minutes I鈥檝e experienced, so we went in thinking there might be a chance for [the film] to do something. Not a lot, mind you, just something.鈥
The film indeed became 鈥榮omething鈥 鈥 grossing more than $10 million at the Australian box office (against a $750,000 budget) and rooting itself in Australian cinema history.
Tailing The Castle for the Working Dog team was The Dish, which tells the story of the role played by the Parkes (NSW) radio telescope in broadcasting man鈥檚 first steps on the moon. 2020 celebrated the 20th anniversary of the film鈥檚 release.
鈥The Dish was completely different,鈥 says Rob, who directed both films. 鈥榃e were tossing around ideas and Tom Gleisner said, 鈥淒o you know about Australia鈥檚 involvement in the Apollo 11 mission?鈥 How that disappeared from our consciousness is amazing. It was on the front pages of the newspapers at the time.鈥 The Dish went on to become another top-grossing Australian film, with actor Sam Neill playing the lead as Cliff Buxton. The real-life 鈥榙ish鈥 was put on the National Heritage List in August 2020.
Despite Working Dog鈥檚 film successes, the group鈥檚 beginnings are in television, and for Rob, his theatrical antics started midway through his studies at Melbourne University when he and a group of students toured a revue around Australia. Their satirical sketches caught the attention of the ABC, which commissioned them for the D Generation series, so Rob completed his medical degree and internship while juggling a budding television career.
Rob had always found study to get in the way of more enjoyable things 鈥 not least a TV series, but also activities including plays and sports at Trinity. 鈥楾he only obstacle for me [at college] was the medical curriculum, which I found relentless,鈥 he says. So, after struggling to strike a balance between medicine and acting, Rob took a year off to pursue the latter upon completion of his medical internship. But one year kept rolling into the next, until more than 33 years had passed.
鈥楾he really big pivot in most of our lives was The Late Show,鈥 says Rob, referring to the ABC series screened between 1992鈥93 which toyed with fake news long before Donald Trump was elected US president. The Late Show preceded Frontline and The Panel in the 1990s, with Frontline picking up a Logie in 1998 for 鈥榤ost outstanding series鈥 and 鈥榤ost outstanding achievement in comedy鈥.
The Working Dog team went on to create the hapless Russell Coight for his all-Aussie adventures, impromptu skits with some of the nation鈥檚 best comedians via Thank God You鈥檙e Here, and the 鈥楴ational Building Authority鈥 in Logie-winning Utopia, in which Rob oversees the equivocal decision-making of federal bureaucrats as lead character Tony Woodford. In 2020, the group鈥檚 comedic news-recap show Have You Been Paying Attention entered its ninth series.
鈥楽elf-importance is extremely amusing for some reason,鈥 says Rob, of his long-time angling towards political satire. 鈥榃hether it鈥檚 TV or politics or the professions 鈥 there鈥檚 a lot of pretending at the top.鈥 And deciding what exactly to poke fun at comes down to a shared consensus among his team. 鈥榃hen an idea gets lobbed up and there鈥檚 any level of disinterest 鈥 goodnight!鈥 he says, of Working Dog鈥檚 secret to success. At a higher level though, Rob admits the team鈥檚 comedy leanings are hard to pin down, because sometimes logic and reason are hard to define.
Sometimes, it鈥檚 just 鈥 the vibe.
By Emily McAuliffe